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  • The Masonic Magazine
  • Sept. 1, 1879
  • Page 13
  • WITHIN THE SHADOW OF THE SHAFT.
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The Masonic Magazine, Sept. 1, 1879: Page 13

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Page 13

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

Within The Shadow Of The Shaft.

WITHIN THE SHADOW OF THE SHAFT .

With a Vignette Illustration by the Author . BY BRO . SAMUEL POYNTER , P . M . AND TREASURER , BURGOTNE , NO . 902 j P . M . ATHEN 2 EUM , NO . 1491 . A story I've heard in my youth , I can't tell whether serious or funny meant ;

I don't mean to vouch for its truth—Once a man ran aAvay with the Monnymect . Up Fish Street Hill swiftly he flew : A watchman who saAV it quick followed it , When what did this sharp fellow do ? Why , he made but one gulp and he sAvallowed it ! Ei-fol-lol-de-iddity , Bi-fol-lol-de-ido , & c—Old Song . " Where London ' s column , pointing at the skies , Like a tall bully , lifts the head and lies . "—Pope .

EVERY one of my esteemed „„ readers will probably find H A this magazine in his or her hands Wfy on the recurrence of the two p hundred and thirteenth anniver-\ , sary of the outbreak of that ter-\ rible devastationto be thereafter

, : j for ever numbered among the tre-: mendous catastrophes of history \\ and known as the Great Fire of 3 London . 1 Of this event , of its associations , aS surroundingssceneand of the

, , : society amidst which it occurred , ¦ | I propose to gossip , I hope plea' \ santly ancl not altogether unprofit-5 * ably , in the ensuing paper . % Of course you know Monument £ Yard . I grant that if , like the

£ swell in the song , you " never go east of Temple Bar , " your ac' - quaintance with that quadrangle ^_ == AA ill be limited to the informa--s ~ 7 ~ tion you derive from an occa-ESsS sional paragraph hiding in the

_~ :. - - „ remotest corner of your dail y •^ LS journal , as if ashamed of itself , ~ ' imparting the market rates of ^_^ - ~ " green fruit , " under which denomination I believe oranges , lemons , and pine-apples are comprised . I know a certain

little maiden very dear to me who delights in propounding the utterl y absurd and insoluble conundrum "Why is a raven like a writing-desk ?" Now , why should Monument Yard remind me of Sherwood Forest ? The flora of that rustic haunt has never , so far as I have been taught , included the aristocratic pine , the lemon that imparts acidulated piquancy to the middleclass grog , or even the humble orange that assuages the thirst of our Sarah

“The Masonic Magazine: 1879-09-01, Page 13” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 25 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01091879/page/13/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
THE SECRET DOCTRINE OF THE TEMPLARS. Article 1
OLD LETTERS. Article 5
THE OLD CHARGES OF THE BRITISH FREEMASONS. Article 7
GOD BLESS THE PRINCE OF WALES. Article 12
WITHIN THE SHADOW OF THE SHAFT. Article 13
ROMANTIC EPITAPHS. Article 19
A FEW DAYS ON THE YORKSHIRE MOORS. Article 23
BEATRICE. Article 29
NAPOLEON, EUGENE LOUIS: Article 33
THE GOOD MASONRY CAN DO. Article 35
CHARTER OF SCOONE AND PERTH LODGE, A.D. 1658. Article 36
MIND YOUR OWN CONCERNS. Article 39
A LECTURE. Article 40
NOTES ON LITERATURE. SCIENCE, AND ART. Article 44
ADVICE GRATIS. Article 48
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Within The Shadow Of The Shaft.

WITHIN THE SHADOW OF THE SHAFT .

With a Vignette Illustration by the Author . BY BRO . SAMUEL POYNTER , P . M . AND TREASURER , BURGOTNE , NO . 902 j P . M . ATHEN 2 EUM , NO . 1491 . A story I've heard in my youth , I can't tell whether serious or funny meant ;

I don't mean to vouch for its truth—Once a man ran aAvay with the Monnymect . Up Fish Street Hill swiftly he flew : A watchman who saAV it quick followed it , When what did this sharp fellow do ? Why , he made but one gulp and he sAvallowed it ! Ei-fol-lol-de-iddity , Bi-fol-lol-de-ido , & c—Old Song . " Where London ' s column , pointing at the skies , Like a tall bully , lifts the head and lies . "—Pope .

EVERY one of my esteemed „„ readers will probably find H A this magazine in his or her hands Wfy on the recurrence of the two p hundred and thirteenth anniver-\ , sary of the outbreak of that ter-\ rible devastationto be thereafter

, : j for ever numbered among the tre-: mendous catastrophes of history \\ and known as the Great Fire of 3 London . 1 Of this event , of its associations , aS surroundingssceneand of the

, , : society amidst which it occurred , ¦ | I propose to gossip , I hope plea' \ santly ancl not altogether unprofit-5 * ably , in the ensuing paper . % Of course you know Monument £ Yard . I grant that if , like the

£ swell in the song , you " never go east of Temple Bar , " your ac' - quaintance with that quadrangle ^_ == AA ill be limited to the informa--s ~ 7 ~ tion you derive from an occa-ESsS sional paragraph hiding in the

_~ :. - - „ remotest corner of your dail y •^ LS journal , as if ashamed of itself , ~ ' imparting the market rates of ^_^ - ~ " green fruit , " under which denomination I believe oranges , lemons , and pine-apples are comprised . I know a certain

little maiden very dear to me who delights in propounding the utterl y absurd and insoluble conundrum "Why is a raven like a writing-desk ?" Now , why should Monument Yard remind me of Sherwood Forest ? The flora of that rustic haunt has never , so far as I have been taught , included the aristocratic pine , the lemon that imparts acidulated piquancy to the middleclass grog , or even the humble orange that assuages the thirst of our Sarah

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