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  • July 1, 1880
  • Page 35
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The Masonic Magazine, July 1, 1880: Page 35

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    Article " ONCE UPON A TIME." ← Page 2 of 2
    Article ENCHANTMENT. Page 1 of 1
Page 35

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

" Once Upon A Time."

few remain who once laughed with us , and cheered us , and chaffed us , aud loved us , and gave ns good advice , ancl were all in all to us , ancl whom we ourselves loved very truly . How few even still survive who scolded us , and bothered us , and bored us , who wo laughed at and chaffed in return , ancl who were the " flics " iu our little morsel of choicest amber . " Non sunt ! " They are no more with ns ; they have left ns ; and we remember them sadly , and grieve for them often ancl want them very much .

I d give many a sugar cane , Matt . Lewis were alive again . But so it cannot be , and to-day , in the throng of men , in a solitary study amid the " songs of sirens" and the noise of a crowd , there comes to us all with the words " once upon a time" an indescribable yearning for those loving faces ancl gladdening smiles which once threw au aureole of truest , tried affection over our homes ancl our hearts . Yeshearts ! for we had hearts

, then . Ancl once more , in Freemasonry especially , we can enter into the full force of these simple , yet meaning words . To how many years of very pleasant fellowship and innocent sociality does the saying " once on a time " carry us back to-day ? We are in the old lodge again as in the cheery days of yore . Those kind faces , and ready hands , and warm hearts are all there before us , if in shadowy outline yet in spiritual reality . We see their

countenances , we listen to their words , we rejoice in their presence . The merry laugh , the harmless joke , the gay symposium , the classic song all come before us again vividly , really , ancl wo can hear our W . M ., with pleasant intonation , saying his emphatic words—or a good old P . M . —either " layingdown the law " or chanting his ancient melody . Alas ! all these are , after all , only "shadows of the past , " simply , purely ; and as I write to-day the room

seems empty once more , and I rise even from this paper with the conviction that , say what we will and do what we will , there is all of the hi ghest philosophy , the truest wisdom , the most beneficial care treasured up for us all in the words " once upon a time , " for ns all , and that as life comes and goes , and we all move on our way through this great waste wilderness of life , there is nothing so good for us all , be we ' who we may , as to bring home to our innerest selves the memories of the past , to soften , to subdue , to better , ancl to bless these cold , composed , hardened heartless hearts of ours . —Farewell !

Enchantment.

ENCHANTMENT .

rriHE sails we see on the ocean - * - Are as white as white can be , But never one in the harbour As white as the sails at sea . And the clouds that crown the mountain With purple and gold delight

Turn to cold grey mist and vapour Ere ever we reach its height . Stately and fair is the vessel That conies not near our beach ; Stately and grand the mountain Whose hei ght we may never reach .

0 distance , thon dear enchantress , Still hold in thy magic veil The glory of far-off mountains , The gleam of the far-off sail . Anon !

“The Masonic Magazine: 1880-07-01, Page 35” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 24 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01071880/page/35/.
  • 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 35

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

" Once Upon A Time."

few remain who once laughed with us , and cheered us , and chaffed us , aud loved us , and gave ns good advice , ancl were all in all to us , ancl whom we ourselves loved very truly . How few even still survive who scolded us , and bothered us , and bored us , who wo laughed at and chaffed in return , ancl who were the " flics " iu our little morsel of choicest amber . " Non sunt ! " They are no more with ns ; they have left ns ; and we remember them sadly , and grieve for them often ancl want them very much .

I d give many a sugar cane , Matt . Lewis were alive again . But so it cannot be , and to-day , in the throng of men , in a solitary study amid the " songs of sirens" and the noise of a crowd , there comes to us all with the words " once upon a time" an indescribable yearning for those loving faces ancl gladdening smiles which once threw au aureole of truest , tried affection over our homes ancl our hearts . Yeshearts ! for we had hearts

, then . Ancl once more , in Freemasonry especially , we can enter into the full force of these simple , yet meaning words . To how many years of very pleasant fellowship and innocent sociality does the saying " once on a time " carry us back to-day ? We are in the old lodge again as in the cheery days of yore . Those kind faces , and ready hands , and warm hearts are all there before us , if in shadowy outline yet in spiritual reality . We see their

countenances , we listen to their words , we rejoice in their presence . The merry laugh , the harmless joke , the gay symposium , the classic song all come before us again vividly , really , ancl wo can hear our W . M ., with pleasant intonation , saying his emphatic words—or a good old P . M . —either " layingdown the law " or chanting his ancient melody . Alas ! all these are , after all , only "shadows of the past , " simply , purely ; and as I write to-day the room

seems empty once more , and I rise even from this paper with the conviction that , say what we will and do what we will , there is all of the hi ghest philosophy , the truest wisdom , the most beneficial care treasured up for us all in the words " once upon a time , " for ns all , and that as life comes and goes , and we all move on our way through this great waste wilderness of life , there is nothing so good for us all , be we ' who we may , as to bring home to our innerest selves the memories of the past , to soften , to subdue , to better , ancl to bless these cold , composed , hardened heartless hearts of ours . —Farewell !

Enchantment.

ENCHANTMENT .

rriHE sails we see on the ocean - * - Are as white as white can be , But never one in the harbour As white as the sails at sea . And the clouds that crown the mountain With purple and gold delight

Turn to cold grey mist and vapour Ere ever we reach its height . Stately and fair is the vessel That conies not near our beach ; Stately and grand the mountain Whose hei ght we may never reach .

0 distance , thon dear enchantress , Still hold in thy magic veil The glory of far-off mountains , The gleam of the far-off sail . Anon !

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