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  • Oct. 1, 1878
  • Page 27
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The Masonic Magazine, Oct. 1, 1878: Page 27

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    Article A VISIT TO ASHOVER CHURCHYARD. ← Page 3 of 3
Page 27

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

A Visit To Ashover Churchyard.

Then there are those again who , having nothing particular to say of themselves , ancl who do not desire to be conspicuous by their silence , mildly apostrophize the tomb as : — " Unveil thy bosom , faithful friend , Take this now treasure to thy trust , And give those sacred relics room Awhile to slumber in the dust . "

We now turn with pleasure to those of a more invigorating nature , and with more of a pronounced orig inality to recommend them . Here is a pretty thought prettily expressed : — - "This lovely bud , so young and fair , Called hence by early doom , Just came to show how sweet a flower

In Paradise would bloom . " There is also a pretty poetical idea in the following , although its estimate of life must be considered rather unhealthy : — "Death like an overflowing stream Sweeps us away . Our life's a dream ,

An ' empty tale , a morning flower , Cut down and'withered in an hour . " . ' . Surely originality cannot be claimed for the next : — ' •' Afflictions sore long time I bore , Physicians w-as in vain , Till God did please for Death to seize And ease me of my pain . "

And it is doubtful whether the same remark may not . apply here also . There is considerable power and stateliness in the measure to make it attractive : — " Death , steady tyrant , deaf to every cry , Marks out his jurney , and bids tho javlin fly ; 0 could our tears dissolve the bands of death , Whole floods should trickle till our latest breath ; Could sihs reanimate the lifeless clay

g , Iu gales of sighs our souls should waft away . " He was a very sensible man who wrote this : — ' "No verse of praise write on my tomb , Since there ' s a judgment yet to come ; Leave all to God , who justly knoivs , And more than we deserve bestows . "

The gem of the collection is the following . It [ requires no word-painting— : n its shrewd suggestiveness it is inimitable : — "This tablet is hero placed in remembrance of John Milnos

, a man of business and in all cases an advocate for a plan . He was born and lived at the Butts where he died a Bachelor , Juno 2 Sth , 1838 , aged 7 S . N . B , — 'Twas said he was an hones ' : man . "

“The Masonic Magazine: 1878-10-01, Page 27” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 24 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01101878/page/27/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
Monthly Masonic Summary. Article 1
CHARTER OF SCOON AND PERTH LODGE, A.D. 1658. Article 2
THE SO-CALLED LOCKE MS. Article 4
AN OPENING ODE. Article 7
MASONRY AND CHRISTIANITY. Article 8
A SONG FOR SUMMER. Article 9
FIVE POINTS OF FELLOWSHIP. Article 10
BEATRICE. Article 11
ART-JOTTINGS IN ART-STUDIOS.* Article 14
LEND A HELPING HAND. Article 16
AUTUMN LEAFLETS. Article 17
AN IMPROMPTU. Article 19
LORELEI. Article 19
MILDRED: AN AUTUMN ROMANCE. Article 21
A VISIT TO ASHOVER CHURCHYARD. Article 25
LOST AND SAVED; OR, NELLIE POWERS, THE MISSIONARY'S DAUGHTER. Article 28
REVIEW. Article 32
SONNET. Article 34
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART. Article 35
THE MODERN ORDER OF "KNIGHTS TEMPLAR" IN THE BRITISH DOMINIONS. Article 38
THE ORIGIN AND REFERENCES OF THE HERMESIAN SPURIOUS FREEMASONRY. Article 46
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

A Visit To Ashover Churchyard.

Then there are those again who , having nothing particular to say of themselves , ancl who do not desire to be conspicuous by their silence , mildly apostrophize the tomb as : — " Unveil thy bosom , faithful friend , Take this now treasure to thy trust , And give those sacred relics room Awhile to slumber in the dust . "

We now turn with pleasure to those of a more invigorating nature , and with more of a pronounced orig inality to recommend them . Here is a pretty thought prettily expressed : — - "This lovely bud , so young and fair , Called hence by early doom , Just came to show how sweet a flower

In Paradise would bloom . " There is also a pretty poetical idea in the following , although its estimate of life must be considered rather unhealthy : — "Death like an overflowing stream Sweeps us away . Our life's a dream ,

An ' empty tale , a morning flower , Cut down and'withered in an hour . " . ' . Surely originality cannot be claimed for the next : — ' •' Afflictions sore long time I bore , Physicians w-as in vain , Till God did please for Death to seize And ease me of my pain . "

And it is doubtful whether the same remark may not . apply here also . There is considerable power and stateliness in the measure to make it attractive : — " Death , steady tyrant , deaf to every cry , Marks out his jurney , and bids tho javlin fly ; 0 could our tears dissolve the bands of death , Whole floods should trickle till our latest breath ; Could sihs reanimate the lifeless clay

g , Iu gales of sighs our souls should waft away . " He was a very sensible man who wrote this : — ' "No verse of praise write on my tomb , Since there ' s a judgment yet to come ; Leave all to God , who justly knoivs , And more than we deserve bestows . "

The gem of the collection is the following . It [ requires no word-painting— : n its shrewd suggestiveness it is inimitable : — "This tablet is hero placed in remembrance of John Milnos

, a man of business and in all cases an advocate for a plan . He was born and lived at the Butts where he died a Bachelor , Juno 2 Sth , 1838 , aged 7 S . N . B , — 'Twas said he was an hones ' : man . "

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