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  • The Masonic Magazine
  • Nov. 1, 1875
  • Page 35
  • NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE AND ART.
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The Masonic Magazine, Nov. 1, 1875: Page 35

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Review.

life is sapped and marred by the dangerous pursuit after wealth at any price , by unhallowed lives , and unbelieving sneers , but above all is varnished over by the corroding veneer of plausible pretence , or sanctimonious hypocrisy , is indeed both alarming

and depressing . Such is our young England of 1875 . Where is it all to end 1 If satirists exaggerate , if satire is , as it practically is , extravagant in some respects , still , as we know well , there is no smoke without fire

, except in very extreme cases , and very scientifically constructed chiiunies . . The satirist himself could not be forthcoming , unlike the poet , '' fit , " " non nascitur , " he would have no vocation , and no audience , unless he had to hear the bray of folly and

of fools at our own very doors ; the counterfeit of the smasher could not be surreptiously moulded without the existence of the real " circulating medium . " And hence we must believe that the cause exists for satire , the need is here for satirists .

We fear that the world at large , and society in particular , heed but little the friendly advice , or the warning tone , take less notice of the smile or the frown . Such as they are , such they wiUcontmuctobe , until in the good Providence of God something will arouse our youth once again to the sterner claims of duty , to hi gher aims , and nobler lives .

Some irrational writers have lately been amusing themselves by charging women generally , especially our younger generation , with being the cause of all the folly , frivolity , extravagance , and giddiness of the hour . Most perverse of accusations , and most untrue . All honour to the

women , we say . They , on the contrary , despite the attributes of fastness and the like so liberall y awarded to them , are still the very salt of this great English society of ours ; they give to it what sweetness , what life , what purity it still possesses . Never at any time was woman ' s kindlinfluence

y more needed to restore and reform than now . Never was the honest-heartedness of Avomen more required to elevate the tone of our decaying and corrupt society than at the present hour . Never Avas it so needful to have Avoman ' s and trust and

grace uprightness and clear perception to bear on the reckless strivings of a diseased generation , to raise it from its " slough of despond , " to animate , to vivify , and to adorn

Review.

to " point to brighter worlds , and lead the way . " Aud just as the patriot never despairs of his country , so we should never despair of humanity . It has passed through many epochs , and through many struggles , through fiery furnaces very heavy , and sad

seductions not a few , and blighted and tainted , as it is , there still linger with it the traces of a g lorious ceatiou , there still belongs to id the likeness of its Divine original . It may be weak and wavering , pervertedbetrayed and debasedbut it still

, , has before it ever the reality of its deathless mission , and the holy aud blessed truth of its eternal destiny . W .

Notes On Literature, Science And Art.

NOTES ON LITERATURE , SCIENCE AND ART .

BY BRO . GEOKGE MARKHAM TWEDDELL , Fellow of the Royal Society of Northern Antiquaries , Copenhagen ; Corresponding Member of the Royal Historical Society , London ; Honorary Member of the Manchester Literary Club , and of the Whitby Literary and Philosophical Society , & - - _• ., & c .

MR . HENRY WADE , Master of the AVolsingham Grammar School , and the author of an admirable prose volume , now out of print , entitled Halcyon , or Bod Fishing in clear Waters , as Avell as of

Country Lyrics , and other Poems , has favoured me Avith the perusal of a lengthy local poem of his in MS ., entitled Richmond and Swaledale , Avhich he says " was Avritten merely as a description of the beautiful scenery it professes to dejfict , interlarded

with local legends , and not with any intention of correct chronological arrangement regarding the events themselves . " My own opinion is , that it would have been almost as easy for a cultivated mind , like that of Mr . Wade ' s , to have preserved strict

chronological arrangement , and thus have made his pleasant poem as truthful to history as it undoubtedly is to the sig hts and sounds of nature . Mr . AVade has the eye of a painter , and the ear and feelings of a poet ; his summer leisure is spent in angling , and in sketching from nature , his winter leisure in painting aud in literary composition ; and with his intimate know-

“The Masonic Magazine: 1875-11-01, Page 35” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 25 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01111875/page/35/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
Monthly Masonic Summary. Article 2
RANDOM RECOLLECTIONS OF FOREIGN TRAVEL. Article 3
TO LOIS. Article 7
THE DUVENGER CURSE Article 7
THE BADGE OF INNOCENCE." Article 10
LIGHTS AND SHADOWS OF SCOTTISH FREEMASONRY. Article 14
ODE. Article 16
THE ORIGIN AND REFERENCES OF THE HERMESIAN SPURIOUS FREEMASONRY. Article 18
SHADOWS. Article 22
CONTEMPORARY LETTERS ON THE FRENCH REVOLUTION. Article 24
NARRATIVE OF AN UNRECORDED ARCTIC EXPEDITION. Article 27
Our Archaeological Corner. Article 28
THE ATTACK OF THE CHURCH OF ROME ON FREEMASONS AND FREEMASONRY. Article 29
THE MYSTIC TEMPLE. Article 33
Review. Article 34
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE AND ART. Article 35
THE ETRUSCAN LANGUAGE Article 38
SONNET. Article 40
THE FAMILY GHOST. Article 40
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Page 35

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

Review.

life is sapped and marred by the dangerous pursuit after wealth at any price , by unhallowed lives , and unbelieving sneers , but above all is varnished over by the corroding veneer of plausible pretence , or sanctimonious hypocrisy , is indeed both alarming

and depressing . Such is our young England of 1875 . Where is it all to end 1 If satirists exaggerate , if satire is , as it practically is , extravagant in some respects , still , as we know well , there is no smoke without fire

, except in very extreme cases , and very scientifically constructed chiiunies . . The satirist himself could not be forthcoming , unlike the poet , '' fit , " " non nascitur , " he would have no vocation , and no audience , unless he had to hear the bray of folly and

of fools at our own very doors ; the counterfeit of the smasher could not be surreptiously moulded without the existence of the real " circulating medium . " And hence we must believe that the cause exists for satire , the need is here for satirists .

We fear that the world at large , and society in particular , heed but little the friendly advice , or the warning tone , take less notice of the smile or the frown . Such as they are , such they wiUcontmuctobe , until in the good Providence of God something will arouse our youth once again to the sterner claims of duty , to hi gher aims , and nobler lives .

Some irrational writers have lately been amusing themselves by charging women generally , especially our younger generation , with being the cause of all the folly , frivolity , extravagance , and giddiness of the hour . Most perverse of accusations , and most untrue . All honour to the

women , we say . They , on the contrary , despite the attributes of fastness and the like so liberall y awarded to them , are still the very salt of this great English society of ours ; they give to it what sweetness , what life , what purity it still possesses . Never at any time was woman ' s kindlinfluence

y more needed to restore and reform than now . Never was the honest-heartedness of Avomen more required to elevate the tone of our decaying and corrupt society than at the present hour . Never Avas it so needful to have Avoman ' s and trust and

grace uprightness and clear perception to bear on the reckless strivings of a diseased generation , to raise it from its " slough of despond , " to animate , to vivify , and to adorn

Review.

to " point to brighter worlds , and lead the way . " Aud just as the patriot never despairs of his country , so we should never despair of humanity . It has passed through many epochs , and through many struggles , through fiery furnaces very heavy , and sad

seductions not a few , and blighted and tainted , as it is , there still linger with it the traces of a g lorious ceatiou , there still belongs to id the likeness of its Divine original . It may be weak and wavering , pervertedbetrayed and debasedbut it still

, , has before it ever the reality of its deathless mission , and the holy aud blessed truth of its eternal destiny . W .

Notes On Literature, Science And Art.

NOTES ON LITERATURE , SCIENCE AND ART .

BY BRO . GEOKGE MARKHAM TWEDDELL , Fellow of the Royal Society of Northern Antiquaries , Copenhagen ; Corresponding Member of the Royal Historical Society , London ; Honorary Member of the Manchester Literary Club , and of the Whitby Literary and Philosophical Society , & - - _• ., & c .

MR . HENRY WADE , Master of the AVolsingham Grammar School , and the author of an admirable prose volume , now out of print , entitled Halcyon , or Bod Fishing in clear Waters , as Avell as of

Country Lyrics , and other Poems , has favoured me Avith the perusal of a lengthy local poem of his in MS ., entitled Richmond and Swaledale , Avhich he says " was Avritten merely as a description of the beautiful scenery it professes to dejfict , interlarded

with local legends , and not with any intention of correct chronological arrangement regarding the events themselves . " My own opinion is , that it would have been almost as easy for a cultivated mind , like that of Mr . Wade ' s , to have preserved strict

chronological arrangement , and thus have made his pleasant poem as truthful to history as it undoubtedly is to the sig hts and sounds of nature . Mr . AVade has the eye of a painter , and the ear and feelings of a poet ; his summer leisure is spent in angling , and in sketching from nature , his winter leisure in painting aud in literary composition ; and with his intimate know-

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