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  • Oct. 1, 1878
  • Page 32
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The Masonic Magazine, Oct. 1, 1878: Page 32

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    Article REVIEW. Page 1 of 3 →
Page 32

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Review.

REVIEW .

A START IN AUTHOR-LIFE *

• '' Poeta nascitur non fit " is not a saying of yesterday , it has been written a good many times , and passed the mouths of many other than its author . It may be true , and it may not ; but in cither case , or indeed if it be partly right

and partly wrong , or sometimes true and sometimes false , it will still do capitally as the starting-point of the few remarks we have to make on " A Start in Author-Life . " " Everybody must have a beginning " is as " old as the hills , " and just as certain as that the hills , old and established though they be , had . onee a beginning too . As with them , then , so with our fledgeling author ; he must have a start , and it matters not one atom whether " the poet" shall have been " born " such or gradually

"become" so , for when he ¦ will essay to make Hs poivers known he must have a start . Than this start there is nothing more difficult to the aspirant for literary fame . To be told that there are plenty of openings to the man , however young , whose name is made , is precisely like the answer given to a schoolfellow of ours who desired to batheby a timid father : " You shall not go into the ^ water till you can swim ! " Bui

, all this is very hard upon young writers , for how , in this case , are they ever to make a start at all ? One might say , " How about the reputations that have been made in the world of literature ? I suppose that all these men have made a start ? " Yes—ive reply—bv . t what a heart-breaking affair it has been ! How many a weary hour ' s labour thrown away ivhen the MS . of the juvenile author has , over and over again , been consigned-to

that literary tomb the waste-paper basket ! How many a young man of promise has been disheartened and disgusted and turned back from the race altogether ! Next it strikes us that young authors would do well if they would be content with somewhat less ambitious aspirations at first . Icarus would not have met with ( he sorry fate he did if he had tried a shorter distance ; and so if the . young poet ' s waxen pinions are to be melted at all by tho fierce sun-rays of popular criticism , it is better for him that ho should fall on his feet on solid ground , whence he may , if he will , make a fresh start , than that he should descend breathlessly from his giddy height into the cold waters of scornful oblivion ivhich engulf him at , once and for ever .

Why , then , should there not be some literary nursery , some publication in which tryers could make their first attempts ?—when lo , as we ask the question , the postman answers it in the most practical manner by putting into our hands The Poet ' s Magazine . We need , after thus introducing it , say no more of it than that the execution of its object is as excellent as the conception of it is unique . Of its matter ive may ,

however , say a few words . The September number , then , of The Poet ' s Magazine , with which we have been favoured , is , as we are glad to see , the commencement of the fifth volume ; this alone speaks well for the public appreciation , ancl therefore success , of the venture . Of the matter of which the Magazine consists , we notice that there is a most judicious blending of prose and poetry , of the sober and the humorous , the former , at times , reaching even the height of reli gious fervour ; when we add that all is pervaded

“The Masonic Magazine: 1878-10-01, Page 32” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 24 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01101878/page/32/.
  • 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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Page 32

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

Review.

REVIEW .

A START IN AUTHOR-LIFE *

• '' Poeta nascitur non fit " is not a saying of yesterday , it has been written a good many times , and passed the mouths of many other than its author . It may be true , and it may not ; but in cither case , or indeed if it be partly right

and partly wrong , or sometimes true and sometimes false , it will still do capitally as the starting-point of the few remarks we have to make on " A Start in Author-Life . " " Everybody must have a beginning " is as " old as the hills , " and just as certain as that the hills , old and established though they be , had . onee a beginning too . As with them , then , so with our fledgeling author ; he must have a start , and it matters not one atom whether " the poet" shall have been " born " such or gradually

"become" so , for when he ¦ will essay to make Hs poivers known he must have a start . Than this start there is nothing more difficult to the aspirant for literary fame . To be told that there are plenty of openings to the man , however young , whose name is made , is precisely like the answer given to a schoolfellow of ours who desired to batheby a timid father : " You shall not go into the ^ water till you can swim ! " Bui

, all this is very hard upon young writers , for how , in this case , are they ever to make a start at all ? One might say , " How about the reputations that have been made in the world of literature ? I suppose that all these men have made a start ? " Yes—ive reply—bv . t what a heart-breaking affair it has been ! How many a weary hour ' s labour thrown away ivhen the MS . of the juvenile author has , over and over again , been consigned-to

that literary tomb the waste-paper basket ! How many a young man of promise has been disheartened and disgusted and turned back from the race altogether ! Next it strikes us that young authors would do well if they would be content with somewhat less ambitious aspirations at first . Icarus would not have met with ( he sorry fate he did if he had tried a shorter distance ; and so if the . young poet ' s waxen pinions are to be melted at all by tho fierce sun-rays of popular criticism , it is better for him that ho should fall on his feet on solid ground , whence he may , if he will , make a fresh start , than that he should descend breathlessly from his giddy height into the cold waters of scornful oblivion ivhich engulf him at , once and for ever .

Why , then , should there not be some literary nursery , some publication in which tryers could make their first attempts ?—when lo , as we ask the question , the postman answers it in the most practical manner by putting into our hands The Poet ' s Magazine . We need , after thus introducing it , say no more of it than that the execution of its object is as excellent as the conception of it is unique . Of its matter ive may ,

however , say a few words . The September number , then , of The Poet ' s Magazine , with which we have been favoured , is , as we are glad to see , the commencement of the fifth volume ; this alone speaks well for the public appreciation , ancl therefore success , of the venture . Of the matter of which the Magazine consists , we notice that there is a most judicious blending of prose and poetry , of the sober and the humorous , the former , at times , reaching even the height of reli gious fervour ; when we add that all is pervaded

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