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  • The Masonic Magazine
  • June 1, 1876
  • Page 22
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The Masonic Magazine, June 1, 1876: Page 22

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    Article NOTES ON THE OLD MINUTE BOOKS OF THE BRITISH UNION LODGE, No. 114, IPSWICH. A.D. 1762. ← Page 4 of 4
    Article SEA-SIDE DREAMINGS. Page 1 of 1
    Article THE WOMEN OF OUR TIME. Page 1 of 3 →
Page 22

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

Notes On The Old Minute Books Of The British Union Lodge, No. 114, Ipswich. A.D. 1762.

study . We have known drapers appointed to such offices who did not know what archeology Avas . The restoration of churches ancl cathedrals and the preservation of castles and other places of historical interest ought to be a matter of the greatest

possible interest to the three great Masonic bodies we ha \ -e named ; ancl Freemasons at large , if they are worthy of their descent , and believe at all in the traditions of the Order , should surely show as keen a delight in these records of the past—these

monuments of history—as do the outer world , Avho are not Masons . But do they ? That is the question .

Sea-Side Dreamings.

SEA-SIDE DREAMINGS .

SfiA , in its calmest ripple , breaking Soft on the sandy shore ; Air , in its sultry stillness , breathing Of peace for evermore . . Rocky cliffs in the distance , tow ' ring Majestic , bold , and free ;

Boats , Avith their white sails , idly floating Out on the glassy sea . Sun , in its fiery splendour , pouring O ' er all its burnished light ; Nature itself , like a giant , reposing After a Aveary fight .

Who that has watched a battle ra ^ ino- — . A battle fought and won—Has not noted the stillness reignino-After the fight was done ?

So this picture of peace before us , Is but the calm that comes After the storm—embleming to us The rest beyond the tomb . Who that looks on such scene enchanting Peacefulsleepingand mild

, , , Could picture the mi ghty elements battlin a In aAvful chaos wild . ° * * * i-A blacken'd piece of wood has drifted In Avith the rising Avave

Sacred to the niem ' ry of those buried Deep in that ocean grave . Bro . G . H . WYATT , 106 . . Kowloongh Sands , Hong Kong , after the Typhoon of September , 1874 . -

The Women Of Our Time.

THE WOMEN OF OUR TIME .

BY CELEBS . OUR YOUXG Wo :. tE _ y . I AM approaching a very delicate subject , ancl yet it is one Avhich I hope to handle with due discretion . In the first placeit

, is a somewhat- difficult matter for an old boy like myself to deal Avith at all ; ancl iu the next place , I somewhat fear that what I am going to say is hardly Avorth the saying . —Still here goes , andAvhether I please , or Avhether I displease , or Avhether

I do neither , I shall hope to speak the truth . I think then , imprimis , that there is far too much undeserved censure cast upon the girls of the period . In my humble opinion , much that is said about them , is altogether sensational , most

unfair , uncritical , and I Avill add , most untrue . The general idea of some of our older folks as well as of our younger men—to say nothing of decayed middle-aged old boys—is that our young unmarried women areveryfast and forward , restless and insubordinate . I do not , for one , believe the averment . As I have pointed out in my last paper , the present age is marked by much

less restraint and formality , than when some of us were young , and that state of things has inevitably reacted on our young unmarried women , and the girls , as they call them , of the period . Girls to-day read much more of the current news of the hour than they did in

my younger years , and much is discussed before them which ought never to be discussed at all , so that the AA'hole conversation of society is more free , less restrained , more peivonal , and less reticent than was the custom in the days of my youth .

The Avhole tendency of the age in everything is to encourage individualism , the assertion of the individual opinion , though such opinion has often to give way to the domineering of Avhat is falsely called public opinion , In former days our girls kneiv

nothing of Avhat Avas going on in the world , at least if they did they only heard it through their brothers and cousins , but now our young ladies know as much as we do , ancl often even a good deal more , and it is this freedom of general discussion , and openness of private conversation Avhich have tendered in my humble

“The Masonic Magazine: 1876-06-01, Page 22” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 24 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01061876/page/22/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
Untitled Article 2
Monthly Masonic Summary. Article 3
THE LEGEND OF THE HOLY THORN OF GLASTONBURY. Article 4
"THE HOLY THORN." Article 10
BROTHER ELLIS'S SKETCH OF PARADISE R.A. CHAPTER , SHEFFIELD. Article 11
SONNET Article 13
SOCIAL PROBLEMS AND THEIR PEACEFUL SOLUTION. Article 13
AN ITALIAN COUNT. Article 16
NOTES ON THE OLD MINUTE BOOKS OF THE BRITISH UNION LODGE, No. 114, IPSWICH. A.D. 1762. Article 19
SEA-SIDE DREAMINGS. Article 22
THE WOMEN OF OUR TIME. Article 22
HOW RAILWAY MATERIALS ARE TESTED. Article 24
T' SPELLIN' BEE. Article 26
DU ROLE DE LA FRANCMACONNERIE DANS L'AVENIR. Article 26
FAIRY TALES UTILISED FOR THE NEW GENERATION. Article 28
ODDS AND ENDS OF WIT AND HUMOUR. Article 30
CONTEMPORARY LETTERS ON THE FRENCH REVOLUTION. Article 37
THE ORIGIN AND REFERENCES OF THE HERMESIAN SPURIOUS FREEMASONRY. Article 39
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE AND ART. Article 47
THE OLD FRIENDS. Article 50
GOLD. Article 50
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Notes On The Old Minute Books Of The British Union Lodge, No. 114, Ipswich. A.D. 1762.

study . We have known drapers appointed to such offices who did not know what archeology Avas . The restoration of churches ancl cathedrals and the preservation of castles and other places of historical interest ought to be a matter of the greatest

possible interest to the three great Masonic bodies we ha \ -e named ; ancl Freemasons at large , if they are worthy of their descent , and believe at all in the traditions of the Order , should surely show as keen a delight in these records of the past—these

monuments of history—as do the outer world , Avho are not Masons . But do they ? That is the question .

Sea-Side Dreamings.

SEA-SIDE DREAMINGS .

SfiA , in its calmest ripple , breaking Soft on the sandy shore ; Air , in its sultry stillness , breathing Of peace for evermore . . Rocky cliffs in the distance , tow ' ring Majestic , bold , and free ;

Boats , Avith their white sails , idly floating Out on the glassy sea . Sun , in its fiery splendour , pouring O ' er all its burnished light ; Nature itself , like a giant , reposing After a Aveary fight .

Who that has watched a battle ra ^ ino- — . A battle fought and won—Has not noted the stillness reignino-After the fight was done ?

So this picture of peace before us , Is but the calm that comes After the storm—embleming to us The rest beyond the tomb . Who that looks on such scene enchanting Peacefulsleepingand mild

, , , Could picture the mi ghty elements battlin a In aAvful chaos wild . ° * * * i-A blacken'd piece of wood has drifted In Avith the rising Avave

Sacred to the niem ' ry of those buried Deep in that ocean grave . Bro . G . H . WYATT , 106 . . Kowloongh Sands , Hong Kong , after the Typhoon of September , 1874 . -

The Women Of Our Time.

THE WOMEN OF OUR TIME .

BY CELEBS . OUR YOUXG Wo :. tE _ y . I AM approaching a very delicate subject , ancl yet it is one Avhich I hope to handle with due discretion . In the first placeit

, is a somewhat- difficult matter for an old boy like myself to deal Avith at all ; ancl iu the next place , I somewhat fear that what I am going to say is hardly Avorth the saying . —Still here goes , andAvhether I please , or Avhether I displease , or Avhether

I do neither , I shall hope to speak the truth . I think then , imprimis , that there is far too much undeserved censure cast upon the girls of the period . In my humble opinion , much that is said about them , is altogether sensational , most

unfair , uncritical , and I Avill add , most untrue . The general idea of some of our older folks as well as of our younger men—to say nothing of decayed middle-aged old boys—is that our young unmarried women areveryfast and forward , restless and insubordinate . I do not , for one , believe the averment . As I have pointed out in my last paper , the present age is marked by much

less restraint and formality , than when some of us were young , and that state of things has inevitably reacted on our young unmarried women , and the girls , as they call them , of the period . Girls to-day read much more of the current news of the hour than they did in

my younger years , and much is discussed before them which ought never to be discussed at all , so that the AA'hole conversation of society is more free , less restrained , more peivonal , and less reticent than was the custom in the days of my youth .

The Avhole tendency of the age in everything is to encourage individualism , the assertion of the individual opinion , though such opinion has often to give way to the domineering of Avhat is falsely called public opinion , In former days our girls kneiv

nothing of Avhat Avas going on in the world , at least if they did they only heard it through their brothers and cousins , but now our young ladies know as much as we do , ancl often even a good deal more , and it is this freedom of general discussion , and openness of private conversation Avhich have tendered in my humble

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