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  • The Masonic Magazine
  • Aug. 1, 1876
  • Page 46
  • NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART.
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The Masonic Magazine, Aug. 1, 1876: Page 46

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    Article NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART. ← Page 2 of 6 →
Page 46

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Notes On Literature, Science, And Art.

The " New York Mercury " states that " the prairie sections of Southern Minnesota are fast being covered with a forest growth since the stopjmge of prairie fires . Willow , wild apple , hazel , oak , and aspen trees spring up spontaneously . The farmerstoohave taken pains to cultivate

, , trees , and groves have become so numerous that they are never lost sight of in travelling . " Resuming our glance at " Las Memorias and other Poems , " from which I gave a few beautiful extracts in the January

number of the MASONIC MAGAZINE , we find , in the poem entitled " Life ' s Regrets , " the following moralising in the true spirit of the Craft , which teaches us how to live and how to die : —

" How short at best this life of ours , When e ' en its longest years are told 'Twas youth for us but yesterday , To-day we ' re growing very old ! Amid the hurrying scenes of Time , Amid the rapid rush of years ,

Amid the vanish'd dreams of youth , Amid all human smiles and tears ; Amid each care , amid each cross , Amid the grief we all must bear , A mid the burdens of our lot , Amid the toils we all must share ;

We see , as day succeeds to clay , And years are fading one by one , How many are our heart ' s regrets , Before the sands of life be run . * * * * Whate ' er our place in life has been

, With it we may be well content , Taking alike in faith and trust Whatever God has sent . Yet better far we might have been , And wiser far in every way , How greatly have improved the hours ,

Those golden hours now past away . How little , after all , of good Has this our buried past to show j How idly have we sought to do Life ' s daily duties here below !

Oh , yes ! when memory to-day Recalls each scene of peace and strife , We see , and say , how better far We might have spent our earthly life . " Passing by "Fragrant Recollections " aud "Vitse Vicissitudines" ( the latter a

good English poem with one of those forei gn titles , with which the author is , as I think , mistakenly enamoured ) , we come to a Keat ' s-like p iece on " Sympathy , " which , being short as well as sweet , I give entire : —

" How wondrous are our Sympathies to-day For others . How oft there meets us in the way Some pleasant face , or form , which lingers still With us , amid all hourly good and ill . And yet we strangers are , and ever will

In earthly life , nor evermore again Shall we behold that bri g ht and sunny face , Or watch , admiring , all that pleasant grace , Yet , still the smile we see again to-day , Though we ourselves are loitering far away That happy face is gleaming like a star

Upon us now , though distant leagues afar . Who can explain that strange mysterious law , By which some word we heard , some face

we saw , Exerts its empire o ' er our musing mind , Filling our thoughts with visions soft and kind ] Oh , who can venture now to seek to trace That solemn mystery of our mortal race 1 By which some gentle smile , a kindly voice , Can bid our inmost heart and trust rejoice , And still can charm , can soften , can subdue Our wayward hearts , though absent from

our . All we can say , and all that Time reveals , In what the lips may tell , or heart conceals , Is , that there is a golden chain of Love Which links this earth to happier realms above ; And still o'er us that gentle influence

reigns , To soothe our pressing griefs and weary pains j Binding us still to one another here , With sympathies undying , true and dear , And joins us still—parts of a mighty

whole—Alike both heart to heart and soul to soul , Until we find that God to man below , To lessen sorrow , lighten the weight of woe , Has given us Sympathies which never cease To bless us here , and still with years increase , Witnessing ever that Life ' s all-fleeting way Is but the shadow of a better day . "

“The Masonic Magazine: 1876-08-01, Page 46” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 25 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01081876/page/46/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
Untitled Article 2
Untitled Article 2
Monthly Masonic Summary. Article 3
THE DAFFODIL. Article 3
THE EARLY INDICIAE OF FREEMASONRY. Article 4
AN EARLY MASONIC BOOK. Article 5
SONNET. Article 9
MAY MASON. Article 9
SOCIAL PROBLEMS AND THEIR PEACEFUL SOLUTION. Article 14
SONNET. Article 19
AN OLD, OLD STORY. Article 19
THE WOMEN OF OUR TIME. Article 21
MASONIC AMATEUR PERFORMANCES AT PLYMOUTH. Article 23
NOTES ON THE OLD MINUTES OF BRITISH UNION LODGE, IPSWICH. Article 26
AMERICAN KNIGHTS TEMPLARS Article 27
ZOROASTRIANISM AND FREEMASONRY. Article 30
THE FALLING SNOW. Article 33
FAIRY TALES UTILISED FOR THE NEW GENERATION. Article 33
THE ORIGIN AND REFERENCES OF THE HERMESIAN SPURIOUS FREEMASONRY. Article 34
Our Archaological Corner. Article 37
MASONIC ARCHAEOLOGICAL NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 39
SERMON Article 41
REVIEW. Article 43
SOMEHOW OR OTHER. Article 45
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART. Article 45
HYMN. Article 50
Untitled Article 51
Untitled Article 52
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Notes On Literature, Science, And Art.

The " New York Mercury " states that " the prairie sections of Southern Minnesota are fast being covered with a forest growth since the stopjmge of prairie fires . Willow , wild apple , hazel , oak , and aspen trees spring up spontaneously . The farmerstoohave taken pains to cultivate

, , trees , and groves have become so numerous that they are never lost sight of in travelling . " Resuming our glance at " Las Memorias and other Poems , " from which I gave a few beautiful extracts in the January

number of the MASONIC MAGAZINE , we find , in the poem entitled " Life ' s Regrets , " the following moralising in the true spirit of the Craft , which teaches us how to live and how to die : —

" How short at best this life of ours , When e ' en its longest years are told 'Twas youth for us but yesterday , To-day we ' re growing very old ! Amid the hurrying scenes of Time , Amid the rapid rush of years ,

Amid the vanish'd dreams of youth , Amid all human smiles and tears ; Amid each care , amid each cross , Amid the grief we all must bear , A mid the burdens of our lot , Amid the toils we all must share ;

We see , as day succeeds to clay , And years are fading one by one , How many are our heart ' s regrets , Before the sands of life be run . * * * * Whate ' er our place in life has been

, With it we may be well content , Taking alike in faith and trust Whatever God has sent . Yet better far we might have been , And wiser far in every way , How greatly have improved the hours ,

Those golden hours now past away . How little , after all , of good Has this our buried past to show j How idly have we sought to do Life ' s daily duties here below !

Oh , yes ! when memory to-day Recalls each scene of peace and strife , We see , and say , how better far We might have spent our earthly life . " Passing by "Fragrant Recollections " aud "Vitse Vicissitudines" ( the latter a

good English poem with one of those forei gn titles , with which the author is , as I think , mistakenly enamoured ) , we come to a Keat ' s-like p iece on " Sympathy , " which , being short as well as sweet , I give entire : —

" How wondrous are our Sympathies to-day For others . How oft there meets us in the way Some pleasant face , or form , which lingers still With us , amid all hourly good and ill . And yet we strangers are , and ever will

In earthly life , nor evermore again Shall we behold that bri g ht and sunny face , Or watch , admiring , all that pleasant grace , Yet , still the smile we see again to-day , Though we ourselves are loitering far away That happy face is gleaming like a star

Upon us now , though distant leagues afar . Who can explain that strange mysterious law , By which some word we heard , some face

we saw , Exerts its empire o ' er our musing mind , Filling our thoughts with visions soft and kind ] Oh , who can venture now to seek to trace That solemn mystery of our mortal race 1 By which some gentle smile , a kindly voice , Can bid our inmost heart and trust rejoice , And still can charm , can soften , can subdue Our wayward hearts , though absent from

our . All we can say , and all that Time reveals , In what the lips may tell , or heart conceals , Is , that there is a golden chain of Love Which links this earth to happier realms above ; And still o'er us that gentle influence

reigns , To soothe our pressing griefs and weary pains j Binding us still to one another here , With sympathies undying , true and dear , And joins us still—parts of a mighty

whole—Alike both heart to heart and soul to soul , Until we find that God to man below , To lessen sorrow , lighten the weight of woe , Has given us Sympathies which never cease To bless us here , and still with years increase , Witnessing ever that Life ' s all-fleeting way Is but the shadow of a better day . "

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