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  • July 1, 1876
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The Masonic Magazine, July 1, 1876: Page 15

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    Article THE WOMEN OF OUR TIME. ← Page 2 of 4 →
Page 15

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

The Women Of Our Time.

matter-of-fact reality , the prosaic utterances of this " grassier" aud uneasy generation . It is a remarkable fact in the history of the world , and of man , that the very moment woman becomes the plaything or the inferior creature , there immediately sets in personal demoralisation and national

degradation , the recklessness of unclean living , and the saddest phasis of debasing civilization . Woman was given to be the help-meet for man ; not the slave or the puppet , the jest or scorn , and whenever men forget that truthand take away from

, woman her earthly mission , or her divine characteristic , so to say , there and then we pave the way both for the hurt of society , and the degradation of the " homo , " man . Hence it becomes a very melancholy fact to note and to feel that we have arrived at

such a point in the progress of our own artificial social life to-day and the normal condition of society , that we have to recognise as a very striking feature of the times in which we live , of the manners which hem us in on every side , of the women whom we know and valueand worship

, and worry , and bless and bore , and cruelly ill-treat , and often savagely beat , by the way , in our great English amenity ; that " some" are " fast , " not as opposed to slow , but " fast" absolutely" per se . " What , thendoes " fast" mean 1 This euphonious

, epithet would simply convey the quality of rapidity , so to say—would imply that certain young women , tired perhaps of the rules of a cold conventionality , and not afraid of " Mrs . Grundy , " like to get the

bit between their teeth , " to do just as they choose , without regard to the mind or morals , or anything else you like , of a decent but less go-ahead society . Fastness may , I think , be also described as excess in various ways—excessive love of

dressexcessiveindependenceofthoughtex-, , cessive freedom of speech , excessive liberty of action ! Seeing the change which has come over society , and to which a distinguished jud ge warningly alluded the other day , we are often tempted , like the " old French Cornmandeur" to out" Mais ou aliens

, cry , MltsT It is rather difficult to say , as the Irishman answered , who was asked where the J ' oad ended , " Bedad , " says he , " it has so many turnings that niver a bit of an md will you ever come to . " Of course

he was wrong , as the old proverb is still true , " It ' s a long lane that has no ending . " Then , though perhaps it ' s not much use prosing on the subject—or heaping up the agony , for the evil , such as it is , like the Gaul is at our gates , the practical question appears to behow best shall we

, deal with , how best shall we amend , how best shall we put an end to what so many loudly deplore and eloquently denounce 1 What is the truest and safest method of removing altogether this jilague spot—if it be a plague sj > ot—from civilized lifefrom

, our homes and hearths , from that domestic existence , which all true Englishmen so greatly value and so manfully praise ? Now I do not take , for one , so serious a view of the situation as some people do . In the first place the proportion of this

" growing evil , " as it is termed by some , is , in my opinion , a good deal exaggerated , and the "fastness" of our' young women is only a " vertigo , " as I regard it , which , like other fashionable maladies , from time to time affect society and our individual life . As I have often before remarked in these papers , every departing generation looks on the young one treading

on its heels , as lax and light , as flippant and forward , as degenerate and disobedient iu comparison with itself , and we are all of us , more or less , fond of croaking aud making things out worse than they really are . Still there are , I fear Ave must conscientiously admitfast young ladies in

, these our days , and " fast young ladies , " ( though ours , I may observe , is not the only generation in which fast young ladies have appeared , ) and we must therefore seek to deal with the question as it comes before us so constantly , is so dinned

into our ears , is before our very eyes , and is so loudly and emphatically condemned as one of the great drawbacks of our existing civilization . First of all let us keep before us this undoubted fact , that fast young women , after all , are the

excrescences , not the natural products , of social and domestic life , They are the parasites which protrude themselves in luxuriant growth , not the real aud valuable and well-grown trees ! Now , fastness assumes various features , aud indulges in various gyrations amongst us . We have the fast young lady in dress , in language , iu habits , aud in opinions .

“The Masonic Magazine: 1876-07-01, Page 15” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 5 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01071876/page/15/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
TO OUR READERS. Article 2
INDEX. Article 4
Monthly Masonic Summary. Article 7
SONNET. Article 7
A PCEAN. Article 8
SOCIAL PROBLEMS AND THEIR PEACEFUL SOLUTION. Article 10
THE BROKEN TESSERA. Article 13
THE WOMEN OF OUR TIME. Article 14
A WORD FOR OUR BOYS. Article 17
SONNET. Article 19
TRIADS IN MASONRY. Article 19
NOTES ON THE OLD MINUTE BOOKS OF THE BRITISH UNION LODGE, No. 114, IPSWICH. A.D. 1762. Article 20
AN ITALIAN COUNT. Article 24
WHISTLE DOWN THE BRAKES. Article 28
ZOROASTRIANISM AND FREEMASONRY. Article 28
THE OLD FISHER'S TALE. Article 32
FAIRY TALES UTILISED FOR, THE NEW GENERATION. Article 32
SPRING. Article 35
THE EDUCATION OF SOCIETY. Article 35
THE ORIGIN AND REFERENCES OF THE HERMESIAN SPURIOUS FREEMASONRY. Article 37
Untitled Article 41
Our Archaeological Corner. Article 42
THE TROAD. Article 43
A STRICKEN HEART. Article 47
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE AND ART. Article 47
THE NEW SCHOOL DIRECTOR. Article 49
REVIEW. Article 50
MASONIC CYCLOPAEDIA. Article 54
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

The Women Of Our Time.

matter-of-fact reality , the prosaic utterances of this " grassier" aud uneasy generation . It is a remarkable fact in the history of the world , and of man , that the very moment woman becomes the plaything or the inferior creature , there immediately sets in personal demoralisation and national

degradation , the recklessness of unclean living , and the saddest phasis of debasing civilization . Woman was given to be the help-meet for man ; not the slave or the puppet , the jest or scorn , and whenever men forget that truthand take away from

, woman her earthly mission , or her divine characteristic , so to say , there and then we pave the way both for the hurt of society , and the degradation of the " homo , " man . Hence it becomes a very melancholy fact to note and to feel that we have arrived at

such a point in the progress of our own artificial social life to-day and the normal condition of society , that we have to recognise as a very striking feature of the times in which we live , of the manners which hem us in on every side , of the women whom we know and valueand worship

, and worry , and bless and bore , and cruelly ill-treat , and often savagely beat , by the way , in our great English amenity ; that " some" are " fast , " not as opposed to slow , but " fast" absolutely" per se . " What , thendoes " fast" mean 1 This euphonious

, epithet would simply convey the quality of rapidity , so to say—would imply that certain young women , tired perhaps of the rules of a cold conventionality , and not afraid of " Mrs . Grundy , " like to get the

bit between their teeth , " to do just as they choose , without regard to the mind or morals , or anything else you like , of a decent but less go-ahead society . Fastness may , I think , be also described as excess in various ways—excessive love of

dressexcessiveindependenceofthoughtex-, , cessive freedom of speech , excessive liberty of action ! Seeing the change which has come over society , and to which a distinguished jud ge warningly alluded the other day , we are often tempted , like the " old French Cornmandeur" to out" Mais ou aliens

, cry , MltsT It is rather difficult to say , as the Irishman answered , who was asked where the J ' oad ended , " Bedad , " says he , " it has so many turnings that niver a bit of an md will you ever come to . " Of course

he was wrong , as the old proverb is still true , " It ' s a long lane that has no ending . " Then , though perhaps it ' s not much use prosing on the subject—or heaping up the agony , for the evil , such as it is , like the Gaul is at our gates , the practical question appears to behow best shall we

, deal with , how best shall we amend , how best shall we put an end to what so many loudly deplore and eloquently denounce 1 What is the truest and safest method of removing altogether this jilague spot—if it be a plague sj > ot—from civilized lifefrom

, our homes and hearths , from that domestic existence , which all true Englishmen so greatly value and so manfully praise ? Now I do not take , for one , so serious a view of the situation as some people do . In the first place the proportion of this

" growing evil , " as it is termed by some , is , in my opinion , a good deal exaggerated , and the "fastness" of our' young women is only a " vertigo , " as I regard it , which , like other fashionable maladies , from time to time affect society and our individual life . As I have often before remarked in these papers , every departing generation looks on the young one treading

on its heels , as lax and light , as flippant and forward , as degenerate and disobedient iu comparison with itself , and we are all of us , more or less , fond of croaking aud making things out worse than they really are . Still there are , I fear Ave must conscientiously admitfast young ladies in

, these our days , and " fast young ladies , " ( though ours , I may observe , is not the only generation in which fast young ladies have appeared , ) and we must therefore seek to deal with the question as it comes before us so constantly , is so dinned

into our ears , is before our very eyes , and is so loudly and emphatically condemned as one of the great drawbacks of our existing civilization . First of all let us keep before us this undoubted fact , that fast young women , after all , are the

excrescences , not the natural products , of social and domestic life , They are the parasites which protrude themselves in luxuriant growth , not the real aud valuable and well-grown trees ! Now , fastness assumes various features , aud indulges in various gyrations amongst us . We have the fast young lady in dress , in language , iu habits , aud in opinions .

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