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  • Nov. 1, 1877
  • Page 12
  • THE WORK OF NATURE IN THE MONTHS.
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The Masonic Magazine, Nov. 1, 1877: Page 12

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    Article THE WORK OF NATURE IN THE MONTHS. ← Page 2 of 6 →
Page 12

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

The Work Of Nature In The Months.

longer , until a gust just a little stronge : than usual of " Chill November ' s surly blast Makes fields and forests have , " and altogether snapping the thread of

life , sends the dead leaf fluttering doAvn to its last resting place in the tender bosom of its Mother-Earth ; and gladly , too , it goes , for its ivork is clone , ancl the biting frost and the burning sun , shall UOAV alike for ever to it remain unknoAvn : —

" 0 Death ! the poor man ' s dearest friend . The kindest and the best ! Welcome the hour my aged limbs Are laid with thee at rest ! The great , the wealthy , feel thy blow , From pomp and pleasure torn ; Hut , oh ! a blest relief to those ¦ That weary-laden mourn ! "

And yet , when it comes to the point , there are but few of us lvho would bo more ready than was . the weary old man , whose interA'ieAV with Death is narrated by / Esop that friend of our childhood , to welcome the final catastrophe . Why give Ai'ay then to

" The tear that we shed , and the sigh that we heave " if by their means we hasten the process of decay ? Surely there are but few of us so burdened Avith the Aveight of our earthly troubles but that Ave Avould rather

" Bear those ills we have , Than fly to others that we know not of . " No ! " Too often Ave wander , despairing and blind , Breathing our useless murmurs aloud ; But tis kinder to bid seek and

' us ( hid ' A silver lining to every cloud . ' May we not walk in the dingle ground , When nothing but Winter ' s dead leaves are seen , But search beneath them , and passing around the tufts of

Are young spring blue and , _ ,. green . Tis a beautiful eye that ever perceives The Immortal illumine : mortality ' s crowd ¦ " jfis a saving creed that thinks and believes ' There's a silver lining to every cloud . ' " Whilst , then , AVC ICUOAV of the . coming Spring ancl its myriad beautiful blossoms ' , Ave can AVOII bear with that Winter dillness which gives that bright season

itsbirth . Besides , is there any period ivhon there are absolutely no UoAvers 1 A very short one indeed , if even there be one at aH . It is true that at this time of year the blossoms may be feAV and meagre , hut still there they arc ; ancl , Avhat is more very beautiful they are , quite as beautiful

if Ave only examine them sufficientl y to note their excellencies , as any of their more shoAvy Summer neigbours . It is your cursory observer , striding along AA'ith nose high in the air , for Avhom there are dull times of year ; but to the true student of Nature these do not exist , for Nature ' s God has so formed Nature ' s . LaAv that there shall he— . i .

" Good in everything . Man ' s duty it is , no less than his pleasure , to search it out ancl be thankful to the Almighty Father AVIIO can , although He be the Great Architect of the Universe , for the sake of His earthly children , stoop thus to " clothe the lott'ly grass of the field . "

Proceeding hi this spirit , then , Ave shall tum our walk to good account , and find our search rewarded by 2 ilants which retain their bloom eA'en thus late in the year . Whilst their gayer companions of the mead were in their glory our humble friends were quite in the shadebut now

, that those brilliant but fragile blossoms arc gone , we are glad to Avelcome our more stedfast , albeit humble , friends . What a picture of existence AA'ith its companionships does the silent mead afford us ; the loudflashyevanescent

acquaint-, , anceships of the hour in strong contrast Avith the quiet , unobtrusive , lasting friendships of a life . Here , then , is the Ivy-leaved Speedwell , Avith its li ght blue blossoms , so common in cultivated lands and hedgerows . Country

people call it Winter-weed , from its continued blossoming . Prom the Avinds and frosts of earliest Spring , to the frosts and Avinds of latest Autumn , midst rain , midst SIIOAV , are to be found the azure floAvers of one or other of our sixteen species of

SpeechveU . The blossoms , from their colour , sometimes get these little plants mis-named Forget-me-nots , but they can be easily recognised from the fact of the loAvest of the four segments into ivhich the

“The Masonic Magazine: 1877-11-01, Page 12” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 25 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01111877/page/12/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
Monthly Masonic Summary. Article 1
WORK OF THE CRAFT. Article 1
THE ORIGIN AND REFERENCES OF THE HERMESIAN SPURIOUS FREEMASONRY. Article 2
OBJECTS , ADVANTAGES, AND PLEASURES OF SCIENCE. Article 3
THE SHADOWS OF EVENING. Article 7
THE ADVENTURES OF DON PASQUALE. Article 8
THE OTHER SIDE. Article 11
THE WORK OF NATURE IN THE MONTHS. Article 11
CIVIL AND MECHANICAL ENGINEERS' SOCIETY. Article 16
CONTEMPORARY LETTERS ON THE FRENCH REVOLUTION. Article 17
SONNET. Article 18
LOST AND SAVED ; OR NELLIE POWERS, THE MISSIONARY'S DAUGHTER. Article 18
MAIMOUNE. Article 22
Reviews. Article 25
SOME ORIGINAL LETTERS. Article 28
DEAR HEART MINE. Article 35
Forgotten Stories. Article 35
HEE LITTLE SHOE. Article 41
NOTES ON LITERATURE , SCIENCE AND ART. Article 41
MY LORD THE KING; Article 44
LIGHT. Article 48
DOUBLE ACROSTIC. Article 48
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

The Work Of Nature In The Months.

longer , until a gust just a little stronge : than usual of " Chill November ' s surly blast Makes fields and forests have , " and altogether snapping the thread of

life , sends the dead leaf fluttering doAvn to its last resting place in the tender bosom of its Mother-Earth ; and gladly , too , it goes , for its ivork is clone , ancl the biting frost and the burning sun , shall UOAV alike for ever to it remain unknoAvn : —

" 0 Death ! the poor man ' s dearest friend . The kindest and the best ! Welcome the hour my aged limbs Are laid with thee at rest ! The great , the wealthy , feel thy blow , From pomp and pleasure torn ; Hut , oh ! a blest relief to those ¦ That weary-laden mourn ! "

And yet , when it comes to the point , there are but few of us lvho would bo more ready than was . the weary old man , whose interA'ieAV with Death is narrated by / Esop that friend of our childhood , to welcome the final catastrophe . Why give Ai'ay then to

" The tear that we shed , and the sigh that we heave " if by their means we hasten the process of decay ? Surely there are but few of us so burdened Avith the Aveight of our earthly troubles but that Ave Avould rather

" Bear those ills we have , Than fly to others that we know not of . " No ! " Too often Ave wander , despairing and blind , Breathing our useless murmurs aloud ; But tis kinder to bid seek and

' us ( hid ' A silver lining to every cloud . ' May we not walk in the dingle ground , When nothing but Winter ' s dead leaves are seen , But search beneath them , and passing around the tufts of

Are young spring blue and , _ ,. green . Tis a beautiful eye that ever perceives The Immortal illumine : mortality ' s crowd ¦ " jfis a saving creed that thinks and believes ' There's a silver lining to every cloud . ' " Whilst , then , AVC ICUOAV of the . coming Spring ancl its myriad beautiful blossoms ' , Ave can AVOII bear with that Winter dillness which gives that bright season

itsbirth . Besides , is there any period ivhon there are absolutely no UoAvers 1 A very short one indeed , if even there be one at aH . It is true that at this time of year the blossoms may be feAV and meagre , hut still there they arc ; ancl , Avhat is more very beautiful they are , quite as beautiful

if Ave only examine them sufficientl y to note their excellencies , as any of their more shoAvy Summer neigbours . It is your cursory observer , striding along AA'ith nose high in the air , for Avhom there are dull times of year ; but to the true student of Nature these do not exist , for Nature ' s God has so formed Nature ' s . LaAv that there shall he— . i .

" Good in everything . Man ' s duty it is , no less than his pleasure , to search it out ancl be thankful to the Almighty Father AVIIO can , although He be the Great Architect of the Universe , for the sake of His earthly children , stoop thus to " clothe the lott'ly grass of the field . "

Proceeding hi this spirit , then , Ave shall tum our walk to good account , and find our search rewarded by 2 ilants which retain their bloom eA'en thus late in the year . Whilst their gayer companions of the mead were in their glory our humble friends were quite in the shadebut now

, that those brilliant but fragile blossoms arc gone , we are glad to Avelcome our more stedfast , albeit humble , friends . What a picture of existence AA'ith its companionships does the silent mead afford us ; the loudflashyevanescent

acquaint-, , anceships of the hour in strong contrast Avith the quiet , unobtrusive , lasting friendships of a life . Here , then , is the Ivy-leaved Speedwell , Avith its li ght blue blossoms , so common in cultivated lands and hedgerows . Country

people call it Winter-weed , from its continued blossoming . Prom the Avinds and frosts of earliest Spring , to the frosts and Avinds of latest Autumn , midst rain , midst SIIOAV , are to be found the azure floAvers of one or other of our sixteen species of

SpeechveU . The blossoms , from their colour , sometimes get these little plants mis-named Forget-me-nots , but they can be easily recognised from the fact of the loAvest of the four segments into ivhich the

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