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  • The Masonic Magazine
  • Nov. 1, 1874
  • Page 6
  • NOUS AVONS CHANGE TOUT CELA!
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The Masonic Magazine, Nov. 1, 1874: Page 6

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    Article NOUS AVONS CHANGE TOUT CELA! Page 1 of 1
    Article CHARLES DICKENS—A LECTURE. Page 1 of 6 →
Page 6

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

Nous Avons Change Tout Cela!

NOUS AVONS CHANGE TOUT CELA !

How well I temember'd other limes , And idle hopes and fears , When I met an ancient flame of mine , I had not seen for years ; And tho' in another day and scene , AVe met all full of glee , I had lost for long all sight of her , And she had forgotten me !

But I knew that face at once again , And the gleam of that waving hair , And the fondly look , and the winning smile , And the presence soft and fair ; Yes , it seemed to be but yesterday , But yesterday in truth , Since we two consorted together , In the hours of festive youth .

Well , time has changes for us all , It severs friends and hearts , It sends us all in different ways , To play oar separate parts , And many once link'd in deep affection , And many a fastest friend , Ne ' er meet again in this noisy life , As onwards their way they wend .

How many have loitered in " Auld lang syne , " By some refreshing shore , Whose sand-castles the sea has wash'd away , Poor builders , for evermore ; How many have laughed in frolic fun , Beneath those stately trees , Or in some pleasant canter on the turf , Or before a favouring breeze !

How many have known each other well , In the friendship of joyous days , AVho've met no more on tbis earth of ours , In their widely severed ways ; AA ho have hardly heard of the welcome name , Or looked upon that face , Which shone for them as a meteor star , In old days of glowing grace !

But let us not complain of change , Tho' the years with our friends depart , It cannot ever take from the true , The sympathies of the heart ; It cannot shut out a vision Of sweet faces and loving eyes , It cannot deprive us of memory's charm , Tho' it bring us weary sighs .

No , years may fade , and scenes may change , And friends may pass away , But the heart it ever will wander hack To friendship ' s ancient day ; Oh , happy law of love sublime , AVhich never can disunite ; Our hopes and fears , and cares and dreams , Have memories fair and bright . C __ ELBB 8 .

Charles Dickens—A Lecture.

CHARLES DICKENS—A LECTURE .

BY BRO . EMKA HOLMES . ( Continued from p . 113 . ) Delivered at the Working Mens' College Ipswich , President , the Lord Chief Baron of the Exchequer , Sir Fitzroy Kelly .

LOED JOHN HEEVEY , IN THE CHAIH . It had been said that Mr . Seymour had something to do Avith the composition of this Avork ( " Piclcwick " ) , Avhich Dickens , however , distmctly denies . The great novelist himself thus writeswith reference

, to the curious name he assumed , and the origin of Avhich has been the subject of so much controversy : — "Boz , my signature in the Morning Chronicle , in the Old Monthly magazine appended to the monthly coA'er of this

book , and retained long afterwards , Avas the nick-name of a pet child , a younger brother , ivliom I had dubbed Moses in honour of the Vicar of Wakefield , Avhich , being facetiously pronounced through the nose , became Boses , and , being shortened , became Boz . Boz Avas a very familiar household Avord to me long before I Avas

an author , and so I came to adopt it . " Touching Stiggins , Dickens observes in his preface : — " Lest there should be any lvell-intentioned persons ivho do not perceive the difference—as some such Avould not Avhen ' Old Mortality' Avas neivly

published—between religion and the cant of religion , piety and the pretence of piety , a humble reverence for the great truths of Scripture and an audacious and offensive obtrusion of its letter , and not its spirit , in the commonest discussions and meanest

affairs of life , to the extraordinary confusion of ignorant minds , let them understand that it is always the latter , and never the former , ivhieh is satirised here . Further , that the latter is here satirised as being , according to all experience , inconsistent _ yith the former—impossible of union Avith it , and one of the most evil and mischievous falsehoods existent in

“The Masonic Magazine: 1874-11-01, Page 6” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 24 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01111874/page/6/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
Monthly Masonic Summary. Article 1
OUR MASONIC MSS. Article 2
A ROMANCE OF THE AMERICAN WAR. Article 3
NOUS AVONS CHANGE TOUT CELA! Article 6
CHARLES DICKENS—A LECTURE. Article 6
PATTY'S CONFIDENCES. Article 11
P. P. C. Article 14
RECORDS OF THE PAST. Article 15
"FABELLA EXOLETA REDIVIVA." Article 19
SHADOWS. Article 21
WHAT IS THE GOOD OF FREEMASONRY? Article 22
Our Archaeological Corner. Article 25
ORATION BY M.W. GRAND MASTER VAN SLYCK, OF RHODE ISLAND. Article 26
THE PRESENT INFLUENCE AND FUTURE MISSION OF MASONRY. Article 29
ON THE STAIRWAY—11 P. M. Article 32
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Nous Avons Change Tout Cela!

NOUS AVONS CHANGE TOUT CELA !

How well I temember'd other limes , And idle hopes and fears , When I met an ancient flame of mine , I had not seen for years ; And tho' in another day and scene , AVe met all full of glee , I had lost for long all sight of her , And she had forgotten me !

But I knew that face at once again , And the gleam of that waving hair , And the fondly look , and the winning smile , And the presence soft and fair ; Yes , it seemed to be but yesterday , But yesterday in truth , Since we two consorted together , In the hours of festive youth .

Well , time has changes for us all , It severs friends and hearts , It sends us all in different ways , To play oar separate parts , And many once link'd in deep affection , And many a fastest friend , Ne ' er meet again in this noisy life , As onwards their way they wend .

How many have loitered in " Auld lang syne , " By some refreshing shore , Whose sand-castles the sea has wash'd away , Poor builders , for evermore ; How many have laughed in frolic fun , Beneath those stately trees , Or in some pleasant canter on the turf , Or before a favouring breeze !

How many have known each other well , In the friendship of joyous days , AVho've met no more on tbis earth of ours , In their widely severed ways ; AA ho have hardly heard of the welcome name , Or looked upon that face , Which shone for them as a meteor star , In old days of glowing grace !

But let us not complain of change , Tho' the years with our friends depart , It cannot ever take from the true , The sympathies of the heart ; It cannot shut out a vision Of sweet faces and loving eyes , It cannot deprive us of memory's charm , Tho' it bring us weary sighs .

No , years may fade , and scenes may change , And friends may pass away , But the heart it ever will wander hack To friendship ' s ancient day ; Oh , happy law of love sublime , AVhich never can disunite ; Our hopes and fears , and cares and dreams , Have memories fair and bright . C __ ELBB 8 .

Charles Dickens—A Lecture.

CHARLES DICKENS—A LECTURE .

BY BRO . EMKA HOLMES . ( Continued from p . 113 . ) Delivered at the Working Mens' College Ipswich , President , the Lord Chief Baron of the Exchequer , Sir Fitzroy Kelly .

LOED JOHN HEEVEY , IN THE CHAIH . It had been said that Mr . Seymour had something to do Avith the composition of this Avork ( " Piclcwick " ) , Avhich Dickens , however , distmctly denies . The great novelist himself thus writeswith reference

, to the curious name he assumed , and the origin of Avhich has been the subject of so much controversy : — "Boz , my signature in the Morning Chronicle , in the Old Monthly magazine appended to the monthly coA'er of this

book , and retained long afterwards , Avas the nick-name of a pet child , a younger brother , ivliom I had dubbed Moses in honour of the Vicar of Wakefield , Avhich , being facetiously pronounced through the nose , became Boses , and , being shortened , became Boz . Boz Avas a very familiar household Avord to me long before I Avas

an author , and so I came to adopt it . " Touching Stiggins , Dickens observes in his preface : — " Lest there should be any lvell-intentioned persons ivho do not perceive the difference—as some such Avould not Avhen ' Old Mortality' Avas neivly

published—between religion and the cant of religion , piety and the pretence of piety , a humble reverence for the great truths of Scripture and an audacious and offensive obtrusion of its letter , and not its spirit , in the commonest discussions and meanest

affairs of life , to the extraordinary confusion of ignorant minds , let them understand that it is always the latter , and never the former , ivhieh is satirised here . Further , that the latter is here satirised as being , according to all experience , inconsistent _ yith the former—impossible of union Avith it , and one of the most evil and mischievous falsehoods existent in

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