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  • June 1, 1876
  • Page 36
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The Masonic Magazine, June 1, 1876: Page 36

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    Article ODDS AND ENDS OF WIT AND HUMOUR. ← Page 7 of 8 →
Page 36

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Odds And Ends Of Wit And Humour.

John Dennis , the critic , Avho ran a muck at the literary men of his day , thus sarcastically describes Steele : "He is a gentleman born—witness himself—of very honourable family , for his ancestors flourished in Tipperary long before the English ever set foot in Ireland . God has

marked him more abundantly than he did Cain , ancl stamped his native country on his face , his understanding , his writings , his actions , his passions , and aboA'e all his vanity . 2 'he Hibernian brogue is still upon cdl tliesethough long habit and length of

, days have worn it off his tongue . " Steele replied to his cross-grained old critic : — " Thy Avorks are libels upon others and satires upon thyself , and while they bark at men of sense call him knave and fool that Avrote them . Thou hast a great

antipathy to thy own species , and hatest the sight of a fool but in thy glass . " See how these Christians love one another ! Literary men don't write of each other quite so pungently now-a-days . Do they love one another any better than in Steele ' s time , I

wonder ? But you know one might go on ad infinitum giving you sketches from the life ancl extracts from the writings of the humourists of the day . Of Dickens himself I have found myself unable to say anything . His writings are before you

, abounding with wit and humour , tenderness , pathos . What can he more inimitably humourous than the trial scene from Pickwick . Avhat more satirical than some

of the Sketches by Boz ? I should have liked to give , had time and space permitted , one extract from the Sketches . Another great Avit I had nearly passed over Avith the mere mention of his name—I mean Sidney Smith . HOAV laconic was his remark on social changesancl yet how

, true ! " There is not one single source of human happiness against Avhich there have not been uttered the most lugubrious predictions : —turnpike roads , navigable canals , inoculation , hops , tobacco , the Reformation , the Revolution . There are

always a set of worthy ancl moderatel y g ifted men who bawl out death and ruin upon every valuable change , which the varying aspect of human affairs absolutel y and imperiously requires . It Avould be extremely useful to make a collection of the hatred and abuse that all those changes have experienced Avhich aro now admitted 2 N 2

to be marked improvements . In our condition such an history might make foll y a little more modest ancl suspicious of its OAVU decisions . " Sir Edwin Landseer , the animal painter , Avas so delighted with Sidney Smith , that

he asked him to sit for his portrait ; to which proposition he replied : "Is thy servant a dog that he should do this thing ?" On the departure of Bishop Selwyn ( now Bishop of Lichfield ) to New Zealand , Sidney Smith Avhen taking his leave of

him , said— " Good bye , my clear Selwyn , I hope you will not disagree with the man Avho eats you . " Once Avhen he was ill , his physician advised him to Avalk upon an empty stomach , " Upon Avhose ? " said he . Sidney Smith once said"I remember

, entering a room with glass all round it , at the French Embassy , and saw myself reflected on every side , I took it for a meeting of the clergy , and Avas deli ghted , of course . "

I have ineidently mentioned Charles Lamb , there is a good story told of him . One afternoon in returning from a dinner party he took his seat in a crowded omnibus , when a stout gentleman subsequently looked in and politely asked ,

" All full inside ? " <• I don't know how it may be , sir , with the other p-p-passengers , " answered Lamb , with his usual stammer , " but that last jiiece of oyster pie did the business for me . " His reply to the heavy agriculturist who asked him his opinion of the prospect of turnips , " Won't it depend a good deal on the boiled legs of mutton , " is droll like the man .

Another stamp of Avriters of humourous books seems to have sprung up of late , and their Avorks , describing a loAver strata in life , than their predecessors , appeal to the classes they are intended to describe , and , in so far as they abound in drollery

andare quite free from impropriety . Though their humour may be Avhat is called in stage parlance , low comedy , I think that their tendency is good , inasmuch as they create a sympathy between different classes of society , and teach us " the gowd is but the guinea stamp , a man ' s a man for a' that . "

Of such a class , are the authors of " Mrs . Brown , " "Mr . Sprouts , the Costermonger , " ancl " Giles ' s Trip to Loudon . " " Mrs . Brown " constantly delights British audi-

“The Masonic Magazine: 1876-06-01, Page 36” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 24 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01061876/page/36/.
  • List
  • Grid
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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Page 36

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

Odds And Ends Of Wit And Humour.

John Dennis , the critic , Avho ran a muck at the literary men of his day , thus sarcastically describes Steele : "He is a gentleman born—witness himself—of very honourable family , for his ancestors flourished in Tipperary long before the English ever set foot in Ireland . God has

marked him more abundantly than he did Cain , ancl stamped his native country on his face , his understanding , his writings , his actions , his passions , and aboA'e all his vanity . 2 'he Hibernian brogue is still upon cdl tliesethough long habit and length of

, days have worn it off his tongue . " Steele replied to his cross-grained old critic : — " Thy Avorks are libels upon others and satires upon thyself , and while they bark at men of sense call him knave and fool that Avrote them . Thou hast a great

antipathy to thy own species , and hatest the sight of a fool but in thy glass . " See how these Christians love one another ! Literary men don't write of each other quite so pungently now-a-days . Do they love one another any better than in Steele ' s time , I

wonder ? But you know one might go on ad infinitum giving you sketches from the life ancl extracts from the writings of the humourists of the day . Of Dickens himself I have found myself unable to say anything . His writings are before you

, abounding with wit and humour , tenderness , pathos . What can he more inimitably humourous than the trial scene from Pickwick . Avhat more satirical than some

of the Sketches by Boz ? I should have liked to give , had time and space permitted , one extract from the Sketches . Another great Avit I had nearly passed over Avith the mere mention of his name—I mean Sidney Smith . HOAV laconic was his remark on social changesancl yet how

, true ! " There is not one single source of human happiness against Avhich there have not been uttered the most lugubrious predictions : —turnpike roads , navigable canals , inoculation , hops , tobacco , the Reformation , the Revolution . There are

always a set of worthy ancl moderatel y g ifted men who bawl out death and ruin upon every valuable change , which the varying aspect of human affairs absolutel y and imperiously requires . It Avould be extremely useful to make a collection of the hatred and abuse that all those changes have experienced Avhich aro now admitted 2 N 2

to be marked improvements . In our condition such an history might make foll y a little more modest ancl suspicious of its OAVU decisions . " Sir Edwin Landseer , the animal painter , Avas so delighted with Sidney Smith , that

he asked him to sit for his portrait ; to which proposition he replied : "Is thy servant a dog that he should do this thing ?" On the departure of Bishop Selwyn ( now Bishop of Lichfield ) to New Zealand , Sidney Smith Avhen taking his leave of

him , said— " Good bye , my clear Selwyn , I hope you will not disagree with the man Avho eats you . " Once Avhen he was ill , his physician advised him to Avalk upon an empty stomach , " Upon Avhose ? " said he . Sidney Smith once said"I remember

, entering a room with glass all round it , at the French Embassy , and saw myself reflected on every side , I took it for a meeting of the clergy , and Avas deli ghted , of course . "

I have ineidently mentioned Charles Lamb , there is a good story told of him . One afternoon in returning from a dinner party he took his seat in a crowded omnibus , when a stout gentleman subsequently looked in and politely asked ,

" All full inside ? " <• I don't know how it may be , sir , with the other p-p-passengers , " answered Lamb , with his usual stammer , " but that last jiiece of oyster pie did the business for me . " His reply to the heavy agriculturist who asked him his opinion of the prospect of turnips , " Won't it depend a good deal on the boiled legs of mutton , " is droll like the man .

Another stamp of Avriters of humourous books seems to have sprung up of late , and their Avorks , describing a loAver strata in life , than their predecessors , appeal to the classes they are intended to describe , and , in so far as they abound in drollery

andare quite free from impropriety . Though their humour may be Avhat is called in stage parlance , low comedy , I think that their tendency is good , inasmuch as they create a sympathy between different classes of society , and teach us " the gowd is but the guinea stamp , a man ' s a man for a' that . "

Of such a class , are the authors of " Mrs . Brown , " "Mr . Sprouts , the Costermonger , " ancl " Giles ' s Trip to Loudon . " " Mrs . Brown " constantly delights British audi-

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