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  • Aug. 1, 1881
  • Page 17
  • OFF FOR A HOLIDAY.
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The Masonic Magazine, Aug. 1, 1881: Page 17

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Page 17

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

Off For A Holiday.

OFF FOR A HOLIDAY .

BY A TRAVELLER AND A BROTHER . A LL work and no play makes Jack a dull boy , " says an old English pro-- £ * - verb , and there is an immense amount of truth in this familiar and humble saying . If the fact be so as regards youthand ifc is undoubtedly so

, , how much more true is it of us all and for us all as we get on in years and find ourselves in the full tide of the " wear and tear" of life , amid the busy and often weary throng of men , burdened with care , engrossed with profit , or bowed clown b y toil ? For then , be it noted and remembered , we are neither so elastic nor active as we once were wont to be ; we do not so soon rally from unexpected or unprecedented pressure of labour or worry ; as the doctors like to

say in their often to us mystical and learned phraseology , our " recuperative powers " are not what they once were . This is so much the case , as we all know , more or less , that if any of us persevere too long in an overwhelming course of hard mental or bodily work , we become jaded in body , depressed in mind , morbid in fancies , nervous and " out of sorts . " Ill-health confronts us sternly , it maybe , with its moral certainty ; dyspepsia haunts us with its

" dark shadows and afflictive vagaries . " Hence it becomes necessary for all who work—reall y work , for there are " workers and workers "—every now and then to have a " break " in their continuous toil , a pause in their normal life , a breathing time in their incessant round—their very existence to have , in fact , relaxation of mind as well as rest of body . Many of us who read these lines , for instance , have arrived at that period of our natural life , when—as with youth , so also with maturity , yes , and old age—a good and needed holiday-time

for us is setting in happily ; and it is the object of this humble paper , dull , perhaps , and prosaic enough in all conscience , to try and depict , however hastily and imperfectly , the views and sentiments with which we naturally greet , and as profitably should use , this temporary change in the customary conditions of our mundane existence clay by day . I do not know whether it much matters if we are married or single . We all equally want a holiday .

The married man , no doubt , has more ' ¦ impedimenta " to think of , more possible obstacles to smooth over and " interview . " The wife of his bosom is not always easy to be pleased ; the olive blossoms " all have to be considered . What suits him exactly may not suit them at all , and " mater familias " is sometimes apt to go in for a " strongish order " when " doing the maternal ;" and taking up the " hih line " with a vengeanceshe denounces this or praises

g , that , not because it harmonizes or disagrees with the views of her " lord and master , " but because it suits or does not suit " bab y "—a fat , howling brat of eight months old—or the engaging Flossy , or that " feeble" Tommie . The poor , solitary , lonely bachelor , or as the French writer once elegantly put it , " pauvre vieux garcon solitaire , " has his troubles also to contend with . His servant also wants a holidayor cook ives noticeor Mary Ann ' s -

, g , young man won't wait , and just as he is starting he has no end of domestic embroglios to disentangle and dispose of . I think at that time many a bachelor cries for a "domestic sewing machine , " who really could be a useful " helpmate " to him in all his worries , though not like Mrs . Radde , take them " all upon herself" and desire Raddle not to " interfere . " But let us assume we are " off" at last , encumbered by many packages and

with three times too much luggage . How pleasant it is to find that we are really , for a time , free from matutinal callers or midday business , those press-

“The Masonic Magazine: 1881-08-01, Page 17” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 24 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01081881/page/17/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
THE YORK MS. No. 5, A.D. 1670. Article 1
THE ADVANTAGE OF CONFESSION. Article 5
Untitled Article 7
THE ILLUSTRATION Article 8
THE WORK OF A MASONIC SESSION. Article 8
BARNARD'S INN, HOLBORN. Article 10
MASONRY V. AGNOSTICISM* Article 13
THE MAIDEN'S BOWER: A SERENADE. Article 16
OFF FOR A HOLIDAY. Article 17
HISTORY OF THE AIREDALE LODGE, No. 387, Article 19
DESCRIPTIVE GEOMETRY AND OUR ANCIENT SECRETS. Article 22
THE GUILDHALL AND THE CHARTERS OF THE CORPORATION. Article 24
MASONIC SYMBOLISM* Article 26
FORTY YEARS AGO. Article 30
A MASON'S STORY. Article 31
THE EGYPTIAN BOOK OF THE DEAD. Article 34
AFTER ALL. Article 36
IN A HUNDRED YEARS. Article 42
LITERARY GOSSIP. Article 43
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Page 17

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

Off For A Holiday.

OFF FOR A HOLIDAY .

BY A TRAVELLER AND A BROTHER . A LL work and no play makes Jack a dull boy , " says an old English pro-- £ * - verb , and there is an immense amount of truth in this familiar and humble saying . If the fact be so as regards youthand ifc is undoubtedly so

, , how much more true is it of us all and for us all as we get on in years and find ourselves in the full tide of the " wear and tear" of life , amid the busy and often weary throng of men , burdened with care , engrossed with profit , or bowed clown b y toil ? For then , be it noted and remembered , we are neither so elastic nor active as we once were wont to be ; we do not so soon rally from unexpected or unprecedented pressure of labour or worry ; as the doctors like to

say in their often to us mystical and learned phraseology , our " recuperative powers " are not what they once were . This is so much the case , as we all know , more or less , that if any of us persevere too long in an overwhelming course of hard mental or bodily work , we become jaded in body , depressed in mind , morbid in fancies , nervous and " out of sorts . " Ill-health confronts us sternly , it maybe , with its moral certainty ; dyspepsia haunts us with its

" dark shadows and afflictive vagaries . " Hence it becomes necessary for all who work—reall y work , for there are " workers and workers "—every now and then to have a " break " in their continuous toil , a pause in their normal life , a breathing time in their incessant round—their very existence to have , in fact , relaxation of mind as well as rest of body . Many of us who read these lines , for instance , have arrived at that period of our natural life , when—as with youth , so also with maturity , yes , and old age—a good and needed holiday-time

for us is setting in happily ; and it is the object of this humble paper , dull , perhaps , and prosaic enough in all conscience , to try and depict , however hastily and imperfectly , the views and sentiments with which we naturally greet , and as profitably should use , this temporary change in the customary conditions of our mundane existence clay by day . I do not know whether it much matters if we are married or single . We all equally want a holiday .

The married man , no doubt , has more ' ¦ impedimenta " to think of , more possible obstacles to smooth over and " interview . " The wife of his bosom is not always easy to be pleased ; the olive blossoms " all have to be considered . What suits him exactly may not suit them at all , and " mater familias " is sometimes apt to go in for a " strongish order " when " doing the maternal ;" and taking up the " hih line " with a vengeanceshe denounces this or praises

g , that , not because it harmonizes or disagrees with the views of her " lord and master , " but because it suits or does not suit " bab y "—a fat , howling brat of eight months old—or the engaging Flossy , or that " feeble" Tommie . The poor , solitary , lonely bachelor , or as the French writer once elegantly put it , " pauvre vieux garcon solitaire , " has his troubles also to contend with . His servant also wants a holidayor cook ives noticeor Mary Ann ' s -

, g , young man won't wait , and just as he is starting he has no end of domestic embroglios to disentangle and dispose of . I think at that time many a bachelor cries for a "domestic sewing machine , " who really could be a useful " helpmate " to him in all his worries , though not like Mrs . Radde , take them " all upon herself" and desire Raddle not to " interfere . " But let us assume we are " off" at last , encumbered by many packages and

with three times too much luggage . How pleasant it is to find that we are really , for a time , free from matutinal callers or midday business , those press-

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