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  • June 1, 1874
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  • TROY.
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The Masonic Magazine, June 1, 1874: Page 28

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Troy.

Who , indeed , has not heard of Troy and of . Hector , and of Priam , and Hecuba , and "telerrima causa belli , " the fair Helen and the victimized Paris , and of Achilles and Agamemnon , and Ajax and Ulysses , and above all of

Homer . To those who like Praed ' s ideal Etonian ( we fancy they do differently there now ) ,

" Who knew the streets of Rome and Troy , Who supped with Fates and Furies , " believe in Homer and in Troy , the doubts and controversies of the present day are almost painful . "When Lord Byron talked of a doubter of a former

generation , as that "blackguard Bryant , " he but expressed in his OAVH sincere vernacular the opinion of most classical students . It is , however , not to be denied that Wolf , a learned Germanhas found many supporters at

, home and abroad for his colder and more critical objections . But despite of all , Bryant and Wolf , and the Biyantites and Wolfites of the hour , Ave prefer " errare cum Mr . Gladstone " in such a matterthan to be

, very Avise and profoundly critical with Wolf or any English sceptic of lesser notoriety . We at once say , ive believe fully and

firmly both in Troy and in Homer , and to all who have ever read Homer ' s Iliad and Odyssey ( Ave leave out the question to-day of the Homeric Poems ) , their remembrance of them is ever pleasant , and their gratitude to the old bard

intense . Eor even HOAV Ave can recall , with all the " sentiment " and effusion of youth , pleasant travels on the dusty Ti'oas , the companionship of the great , and the true , and the softer associations of poetry and pathos .

As alternately our sympathies pre touched , or our interest is roused , as Ave deplore the fate of Hector or admire the courage of Achilles , as Ave pity poor old Priam , and yet sympathize with the indignant Greeksas ive are

im-, pressed , if ivithout much of admiration , with the subtlety of Ulysses or the cleverness of Agamemnon , Ave yet can deeply feel for Andromache , and think

her parting with Hector the most touching of episodes . And as Ave find in the Homeric Song all that can dignify virtue and all that can delight imagination , all that is high-minded , tender , feeling , and true ,

despite the onward march of men and the accumulated poetry of time , ive yet can go hack to the tale of Troy and of Hector and Achilles and Ulysses , and Penelope and ( Eneas , and Priam and'Cassandraand even Briseiswith

, , a sense of freshness ivhich nothing can take away , with a perception of the true spirit of s-onjs . s , and pleasant tender imagination , which no later poet has equalled , much leas surpassed . And to us therefore the news of

Dr . Schliemann s excavations lias come Avith feelings , both of grateful sympathy and revivified interest , Eor three years the good Dr ., ive believe , as his name tells us of German extraction , accompanied by his wife , an Athenian lady endowed

evidently with great energy and presence of mind , has been diligently exploring the site , as he rightly conjectured , of old Troy . It is well-known that much difference of opinion has preimiled among even the most learned men as to the real sit of the famous Ilium .

Misled by Strabo oi old , some'in all ages have refused to believe that New Troy was built on the ruins of its older namesake , and have therefore sought for Troy on one or other of the " debris" of old cities which still

surmount the plain , like Bournabaslu and Chiflak . ButDr . Schliemann rig i itly conj ectured that New Troy ivas , after all , the real site of old Troy , ivhich , standing as it does on its own elevated plateau , and

between two rivers , best answers to Homer ' s own description , ivho . had clearly seen with his own eyes what he so well pourtrays . The place is now called Hissarlilc , and here it was that Dr . Schliemann

determined to excavate , and thus by Avhat Lord Palmerston called a " concurrence of atoms , " and somebody else has termed

“The Masonic Magazine: 1874-06-01, Page 28” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 21 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01061874/page/28/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
Monthly Masonic Summary. Article 1
OUR GRAND MASTER. Article 2
THE OLD MASONIC POEM. Article 3
BYE-LAWS OF MILLTARY LODGES. Article 4
THE NEW MORALITY, 1874. Article 6
ROOKSTONE PRIORY. Article 7
THE HISTORY OF FREEMASONRY IN RUSSIA. Article 12
SERMON BY THE REV. H. W. KEMP, B.A., P.P.G.O., Article 14
THE OLD TILER. Article 16
SYMBOLISMS OF THE APRON. Article 16
THE MASON'S WIFE. Article 17
OUR LATE BRO. WM. CARPENTER. Article 17
UNDER THE TRAIN. Article 19
AN APRIL SERMON. Article 22
LANGUAGE. Article 22
ST. VINCENT. Article 24
WELCOMBE HILLS, STRATFORD-ON-AVON. Article 27
TROY. Article 27
LECTURE BY BRO. EMRA HOLMES ON " TOM HOOD." Article 31
THE FOOTSTEPS OF DECAY. Article 32
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Troy.

Who , indeed , has not heard of Troy and of . Hector , and of Priam , and Hecuba , and "telerrima causa belli , " the fair Helen and the victimized Paris , and of Achilles and Agamemnon , and Ajax and Ulysses , and above all of

Homer . To those who like Praed ' s ideal Etonian ( we fancy they do differently there now ) ,

" Who knew the streets of Rome and Troy , Who supped with Fates and Furies , " believe in Homer and in Troy , the doubts and controversies of the present day are almost painful . "When Lord Byron talked of a doubter of a former

generation , as that "blackguard Bryant , " he but expressed in his OAVH sincere vernacular the opinion of most classical students . It is , however , not to be denied that Wolf , a learned Germanhas found many supporters at

, home and abroad for his colder and more critical objections . But despite of all , Bryant and Wolf , and the Biyantites and Wolfites of the hour , Ave prefer " errare cum Mr . Gladstone " in such a matterthan to be

, very Avise and profoundly critical with Wolf or any English sceptic of lesser notoriety . We at once say , ive believe fully and

firmly both in Troy and in Homer , and to all who have ever read Homer ' s Iliad and Odyssey ( Ave leave out the question to-day of the Homeric Poems ) , their remembrance of them is ever pleasant , and their gratitude to the old bard

intense . Eor even HOAV Ave can recall , with all the " sentiment " and effusion of youth , pleasant travels on the dusty Ti'oas , the companionship of the great , and the true , and the softer associations of poetry and pathos .

As alternately our sympathies pre touched , or our interest is roused , as Ave deplore the fate of Hector or admire the courage of Achilles , as Ave pity poor old Priam , and yet sympathize with the indignant Greeksas ive are

im-, pressed , if ivithout much of admiration , with the subtlety of Ulysses or the cleverness of Agamemnon , Ave yet can deeply feel for Andromache , and think

her parting with Hector the most touching of episodes . And as Ave find in the Homeric Song all that can dignify virtue and all that can delight imagination , all that is high-minded , tender , feeling , and true ,

despite the onward march of men and the accumulated poetry of time , ive yet can go hack to the tale of Troy and of Hector and Achilles and Ulysses , and Penelope and ( Eneas , and Priam and'Cassandraand even Briseiswith

, , a sense of freshness ivhich nothing can take away , with a perception of the true spirit of s-onjs . s , and pleasant tender imagination , which no later poet has equalled , much leas surpassed . And to us therefore the news of

Dr . Schliemann s excavations lias come Avith feelings , both of grateful sympathy and revivified interest , Eor three years the good Dr ., ive believe , as his name tells us of German extraction , accompanied by his wife , an Athenian lady endowed

evidently with great energy and presence of mind , has been diligently exploring the site , as he rightly conjectured , of old Troy . It is well-known that much difference of opinion has preimiled among even the most learned men as to the real sit of the famous Ilium .

Misled by Strabo oi old , some'in all ages have refused to believe that New Troy was built on the ruins of its older namesake , and have therefore sought for Troy on one or other of the " debris" of old cities which still

surmount the plain , like Bournabaslu and Chiflak . ButDr . Schliemann rig i itly conj ectured that New Troy ivas , after all , the real site of old Troy , ivhich , standing as it does on its own elevated plateau , and

between two rivers , best answers to Homer ' s own description , ivho . had clearly seen with his own eyes what he so well pourtrays . The place is now called Hissarlilc , and here it was that Dr . Schliemann

determined to excavate , and thus by Avhat Lord Palmerston called a " concurrence of atoms , " and somebody else has termed

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