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  • Sept. 1, 1877
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The Masonic Magazine, Sept. 1, 1877: Page 15

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    Article THE ADVENTURES OF DON PASQUALE. ← Page 2 of 4 →
Page 15

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The Adventures Of Don Pasquale.

pation that Paesiello " threw himself , " as some old writers so elegantly jibrase it , » into the corner of his travelling carriage , " and started on his long travels , with youth and health , and contentment in his trainall great and precious gifts , and never to be

despised or wasted , depreciated , or thrown away , by mortal man . It is something to know that one is master of one ' s self , one ' s p lans and jiroceedings , one ' s purposes and pursuits . But we who have grown grey and old have outlived the effervescence of life ,

and have discounted , alas ! those many accejitances which too soon reach " maturity . " For us , illusions are over . We know , too well , how great , are the disajinointrnents and deceits of earth , aud for us fancy has fled away . We see things as they really are—no longer invested with the roseate hues of earl y dawn , no more accompanied by the bright gleams of hapjry

inexperience . Certainty has dispelled equally our anticipations and expectations , our fears and forebodings , one by one , and has left for us nothing hi their stead but tho formal

routine of life , the duller level of customary and dejected society . Where are ah our fair imaginings fled to ? And so when Paesiello , all enthusiastic , praised the beauties of the scenery , or talked of the wonders he hoped and longed

to see , Don Balthazar politely assented , hut calmly smoked his cigarette ; while Antonio , in his native patois , jironounced audible blessings on the horses and the post-boys , the world hi general , and each post-master in particular , in a frame of

mind alternately cynical and cheerful , hiiimph ant and depressed ! How queer Me the conditions of life to us all , and how contrasted are the various measures ! "icl aspects with which we regard the same position or treat the same thingMuch

, . depends , no doubt , on our digestion , or 'he "balance at our banker ' s , " on ' numerous contingencies , open and secret , on countle ss persons , male and female , who compose our " entourage , " or are mixed up with our lot

. At last , the cracking of the postillions ' 1 vl » ps announced that our travellers had ^ preached the Douane of Venice , and as jjy hero had received a friendl y letter from 110 head of the Douaniers of his native

land , to the chief of the Venetian Dogana , with that " camaraderie " which . exists everywhere , if we only knew how to profit by it , Paesiello with his belongings , and after a quiet little " bezzi-mano , " was allowed to enter the fan- town of Venice ,

and drive straight to the famous hotel of St . Geromino , which abuts on the Grand Canal . " Beautiful Venice " is the burden of an

old song often sung m the days of a famous " Choral Union , ' long since numbered with the departed good tilings of this world , I sadly fear , but bound up with many very jileasant memories to me of " auld lang syne , " and kind friends , and pleasant faces and tuneful voices . " Beautiful Venice" was still , in Paesiello ' s young days a most agreeable place to see , and to loiter in !

And , as my hero s first adventure happened within the walls of Venice , and it is one , as Don Balthazar said , which did equal credit to "Ms head and to Ms heart , " I think it right to be particidar and prolix in the greatest degree . The pilgrims arrived at the time of the

Carnival , and , of course , as one in the full bloom of youth , Paesiello was not averse to make one , if for a short moment , of that gay and glittering throng . Of course he did all the lions , and saw all the si ghts of Venice . He was impressed with St .

Mark ' s , and pathetic in the Doge ' s Palace ; he saw the subterranean prison from wliich Bro . Casanova escaped ; he stood on the Bridge of Sighs , he lounged in gondolas amid wreaths of Turkish tobacco ; he

thought of Shylock on the Rialto , and Portia and Jessica , and drank iced lemonade on the Piazza di San Marco . I don't fancy that he thought much of the " Bucentaur , ' ' and I am even certain of this—that he was very glad to remember that bright and beautiful Venice

was no longer under that horrible and cruel oligarchy , whose highest idea of good government was the Council of Ten , the Masked Three , whose normal mode of punishment was the secret denunciation and the lion ' s mouththe living prison and the

, midnight murder . Perhaps the very best thing Napoleon I . ever did , was the civil absorption of the Venetian into the Cisalpine Republic . But Venice was very gay , and Paesiello

“The Masonic Magazine: 1877-09-01, Page 15” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 25 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01091877/page/15/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
Monthly Masonic Summary. Article 1
SONNET. Article 1
OBJECTS, ADVANTAGES, AND PLEASURES OF SCIENCE. Article 2
THE DEATH OF ALEXANDER. Article 6
DEVONSHIRE LODGES PRIOR TO THE "UNION" OF DEC, 1813. Article 7
THE WORK OF NATURE IN THE MONTHS. Article 10
UPBRAID ME NOT. Article 13
THE ADVENTURES OF DON PASQUALE. Article 14
AN OLD-FASHIONED LOVE-SONG. Article 17
WHAT IS THE GOOD OF FREEMASONRY? Article 18
Architectural Jottings. Article 20
MY LORD THE KING; Article 22
ONLY A ROSE. Article 28
Our Archaeological Corner. Article 29
THE TRYST. Article 31
CONTEMPORARY LETTERS ON THE FRENCH REVOLUTION. Article 32
PROCLAMATION DU ROI, Article 32
ORDRE DE MARCHE. Article 33
PLAN, Article 34
Untitled Article 35
AFTER THE LAST POPULAR SCIENCE LECTURE. Article 36
TOM HOOD. Article 37
THE VISTA OF LIFE. Article 41
Forgotten Stories. Article 44
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE AND ART. Article 46
MR. SPRECHELHEIMER'S MISTAKE. Article 49
DOUBLE ACROSTIC. Article 49
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

The Adventures Of Don Pasquale.

pation that Paesiello " threw himself , " as some old writers so elegantly jibrase it , » into the corner of his travelling carriage , " and started on his long travels , with youth and health , and contentment in his trainall great and precious gifts , and never to be

despised or wasted , depreciated , or thrown away , by mortal man . It is something to know that one is master of one ' s self , one ' s p lans and jiroceedings , one ' s purposes and pursuits . But we who have grown grey and old have outlived the effervescence of life ,

and have discounted , alas ! those many accejitances which too soon reach " maturity . " For us , illusions are over . We know , too well , how great , are the disajinointrnents and deceits of earth , aud for us fancy has fled away . We see things as they really are—no longer invested with the roseate hues of earl y dawn , no more accompanied by the bright gleams of hapjry

inexperience . Certainty has dispelled equally our anticipations and expectations , our fears and forebodings , one by one , and has left for us nothing hi their stead but tho formal

routine of life , the duller level of customary and dejected society . Where are ah our fair imaginings fled to ? And so when Paesiello , all enthusiastic , praised the beauties of the scenery , or talked of the wonders he hoped and longed

to see , Don Balthazar politely assented , hut calmly smoked his cigarette ; while Antonio , in his native patois , jironounced audible blessings on the horses and the post-boys , the world hi general , and each post-master in particular , in a frame of

mind alternately cynical and cheerful , hiiimph ant and depressed ! How queer Me the conditions of life to us all , and how contrasted are the various measures ! "icl aspects with which we regard the same position or treat the same thingMuch

, . depends , no doubt , on our digestion , or 'he "balance at our banker ' s , " on ' numerous contingencies , open and secret , on countle ss persons , male and female , who compose our " entourage , " or are mixed up with our lot

. At last , the cracking of the postillions ' 1 vl » ps announced that our travellers had ^ preached the Douane of Venice , and as jjy hero had received a friendl y letter from 110 head of the Douaniers of his native

land , to the chief of the Venetian Dogana , with that " camaraderie " which . exists everywhere , if we only knew how to profit by it , Paesiello with his belongings , and after a quiet little " bezzi-mano , " was allowed to enter the fan- town of Venice ,

and drive straight to the famous hotel of St . Geromino , which abuts on the Grand Canal . " Beautiful Venice " is the burden of an

old song often sung m the days of a famous " Choral Union , ' long since numbered with the departed good tilings of this world , I sadly fear , but bound up with many very jileasant memories to me of " auld lang syne , " and kind friends , and pleasant faces and tuneful voices . " Beautiful Venice" was still , in Paesiello ' s young days a most agreeable place to see , and to loiter in !

And , as my hero s first adventure happened within the walls of Venice , and it is one , as Don Balthazar said , which did equal credit to "Ms head and to Ms heart , " I think it right to be particidar and prolix in the greatest degree . The pilgrims arrived at the time of the

Carnival , and , of course , as one in the full bloom of youth , Paesiello was not averse to make one , if for a short moment , of that gay and glittering throng . Of course he did all the lions , and saw all the si ghts of Venice . He was impressed with St .

Mark ' s , and pathetic in the Doge ' s Palace ; he saw the subterranean prison from wliich Bro . Casanova escaped ; he stood on the Bridge of Sighs , he lounged in gondolas amid wreaths of Turkish tobacco ; he

thought of Shylock on the Rialto , and Portia and Jessica , and drank iced lemonade on the Piazza di San Marco . I don't fancy that he thought much of the " Bucentaur , ' ' and I am even certain of this—that he was very glad to remember that bright and beautiful Venice

was no longer under that horrible and cruel oligarchy , whose highest idea of good government was the Council of Ten , the Masked Three , whose normal mode of punishment was the secret denunciation and the lion ' s mouththe living prison and the

, midnight murder . Perhaps the very best thing Napoleon I . ever did , was the civil absorption of the Venetian into the Cisalpine Republic . But Venice was very gay , and Paesiello

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