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  • July 1, 1880
  • Page 34
  • " ONCE UPON A TIME."
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The Masonic Magazine, July 1, 1880: Page 34

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Page 34

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

" Once Upon A Time."

" ONCE UPON A TIME . "

BY OMEGA . " Ldbitur occulte fallit-que vohibilis cetas . " nj'lHESE are words which we hear almost every day of our lives . They occur J- in common conversation ; they are to be found in the customary literature of the hour . Perhaps few expressions are in more wonted use or are more

familiar to us all , and yet , as it seems to me , we hardly ever ( as is too frequently the case in this our way of the world ) realize their full meaning , their actual intensity of truth . I think it well to send a few moralizing lines "thereanent , " for which , perhaps , a corner niay be kindly found in the Masonic Magazine . I do not suppose that I shall say anything very new or striking ; but still even my "dull tenour " may have its use , ancl give some one reader a few pleasant if

passing thoughts , ancl to render the useful pages of the "Maga . " profitable for all who month by month peruse them , or at any rate profess to peruse them , For , to say the truth , I am myself somewhat inclined to agree with the cynic who say of our age , " much talking , little reading , less thinking . " Ancl yet . to judge from literary announcements one should " a priori" be ready to suppose that never was so much read generallynever beforecertainlywere s 6 many

, , , " serials " issued , never literally were there so many means of mental improvement and instruction provided by intellectual caterers for a passing , reading , thoughtful generation . Let us leave the question , as Mr . Gladstone would say , to "its own solution in the fulness of time , " ancl let us attend to the little "text" on which I propose to hang a Masonic essay—not a sermonplease note this !

" Once upon a time is full , surely , of vivid reminiscences to us all , when it takes us back , as it often does , from this realistic ancl dull and dust y life to-day of ours to the hopes and aspirations , the " glamour " and fancies of far off earlier years . To-day , when all seems so commonplace and dreary often to the acute sensibilities of active thought and actual experience , what a relief it is to betake ourselves to that " once upon a time " in the "long ago " so touchingly painted by Lord Houghton , when we ourselves had not given

up our golden dreams , ancl when callous realism and crushing certainty had not dimmed and dispensed with the fascination of anticipation , the longings of untainted sympathies . Then all was bright ancl fair before us . We foresaw no disappointment , we forereckoned no decay , we could not conceive how anything was to darken those blue skies , to change those fair fl iwers , to deform or disturb those happy hours . Alas , to-day , how few of us but must echo

sadly these words " once upon a time , " when we know how time , and change , and crosses , ancl cares , and heartburdens , and heartaches have thrown as it were a funeral pall of sadness ancl gloom over all the glowing ancl gracious imaginings which then were ours . Reality is very very different from anticipation , ancl often all that " once upon a time " promised such lengthened happiness to us and ours turns out to have been a deceiving figment or a deluding phantasy . So too , how true it is as regards old friends and mates . " Once upon a time " we were a very merry party , ancl bound together b y most congenial ties of friendship , interest , and affection . Praed sang , of old , —

Where are my old companions gone ? I ' ve few to share my beaker ; Some lie before the churchyard stone , And some before the speaker ; and most true it still is in its way for us all . Let us fix our attention for a moment at a given point or landmark on the receding shore of time . How n

“The Masonic Magazine: 1880-07-01, Page 34” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 24 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01071880/page/34/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
Untitled Article 2
PREFACE TO THE EIGHTH VOLUME. Article 3
Untitled Article 4
ST. JOHN'S LODGE, BOLTON. Article 6
THE MYSTIC CRAFT. Article 8
KLOSS'S MASONIC BIBLIOGRAPHY. Article 9
THE RUNES.* Article 10
A LECTURE ON THE ANTIQUITY OF LAYING CORNER STONES WITH RELIGIOUS AND MYSTICAL CEREMONIES.* Article 12
RIGHTS AND TENETS OF THE ESSENES. Article 17
OLD ST. PAUL'S. Article 19
THE WAKEFIELD NEW MASONIC HALL. Article 21
BOOKS AND BOOKS. Article 24
MASONIC ADDRESS. Article 27
WANTED—A WIFE! Article 29
THE YORK FABRIC ROLLS. Article 30
VINOVIUM. Article 32
" ONCE UPON A TIME." Article 34
ENCHANTMENT. Article 35
A SERMON Article 36
THE LONDON COMPANIES. Article 40
THE END OF THE PLAY. Article 41
THE STORY OF ARDEN OF FAVERSHAM. Article 42
MASONIC AND GENERAL ARCHAEOLOGIA. Article 45
TRURO: Article 49
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Page 34

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

" Once Upon A Time."

" ONCE UPON A TIME . "

BY OMEGA . " Ldbitur occulte fallit-que vohibilis cetas . " nj'lHESE are words which we hear almost every day of our lives . They occur J- in common conversation ; they are to be found in the customary literature of the hour . Perhaps few expressions are in more wonted use or are more

familiar to us all , and yet , as it seems to me , we hardly ever ( as is too frequently the case in this our way of the world ) realize their full meaning , their actual intensity of truth . I think it well to send a few moralizing lines "thereanent , " for which , perhaps , a corner niay be kindly found in the Masonic Magazine . I do not suppose that I shall say anything very new or striking ; but still even my "dull tenour " may have its use , ancl give some one reader a few pleasant if

passing thoughts , ancl to render the useful pages of the "Maga . " profitable for all who month by month peruse them , or at any rate profess to peruse them , For , to say the truth , I am myself somewhat inclined to agree with the cynic who say of our age , " much talking , little reading , less thinking . " Ancl yet . to judge from literary announcements one should " a priori" be ready to suppose that never was so much read generallynever beforecertainlywere s 6 many

, , , " serials " issued , never literally were there so many means of mental improvement and instruction provided by intellectual caterers for a passing , reading , thoughtful generation . Let us leave the question , as Mr . Gladstone would say , to "its own solution in the fulness of time , " ancl let us attend to the little "text" on which I propose to hang a Masonic essay—not a sermonplease note this !

" Once upon a time is full , surely , of vivid reminiscences to us all , when it takes us back , as it often does , from this realistic ancl dull and dust y life to-day of ours to the hopes and aspirations , the " glamour " and fancies of far off earlier years . To-day , when all seems so commonplace and dreary often to the acute sensibilities of active thought and actual experience , what a relief it is to betake ourselves to that " once upon a time " in the "long ago " so touchingly painted by Lord Houghton , when we ourselves had not given

up our golden dreams , ancl when callous realism and crushing certainty had not dimmed and dispensed with the fascination of anticipation , the longings of untainted sympathies . Then all was bright ancl fair before us . We foresaw no disappointment , we forereckoned no decay , we could not conceive how anything was to darken those blue skies , to change those fair fl iwers , to deform or disturb those happy hours . Alas , to-day , how few of us but must echo

sadly these words " once upon a time , " when we know how time , and change , and crosses , ancl cares , and heartburdens , and heartaches have thrown as it were a funeral pall of sadness ancl gloom over all the glowing ancl gracious imaginings which then were ours . Reality is very very different from anticipation , ancl often all that " once upon a time " promised such lengthened happiness to us and ours turns out to have been a deceiving figment or a deluding phantasy . So too , how true it is as regards old friends and mates . " Once upon a time " we were a very merry party , ancl bound together b y most congenial ties of friendship , interest , and affection . Praed sang , of old , —

Where are my old companions gone ? I ' ve few to share my beaker ; Some lie before the churchyard stone , And some before the speaker ; and most true it still is in its way for us all . Let us fix our attention for a moment at a given point or landmark on the receding shore of time . How n

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