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  • The Masonic Magazine
  • Nov. 1, 1877
  • Page 15
  • THE WORK OF NATURE IN THE MONTHS.
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The Masonic Magazine, Nov. 1, 1877: Page 15

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

The Work Of Nature In The Months.

which is just one of those pieces of apparently undesigned evidence of an all-ivise lS well as all-powerful Will permeating and regulating the Avhole course of Nature , which , when it thus incidentally crops out to the surface , stamps all Creation as the of GodThe Hazel

luincliAVOi'k . common or Wood-nut is eagerly devoured by three well-known , because commonly occurring , kinds of animal life—the Squirrel , the Field-mouse , and the Nut-hatch ; but each trets at the kernel in a different way , so

that finding , in the course of our walk , an emp ty nutshell , Ave are quite able to tell the creature that has opened it . Sitting on his haunches and holding the nut in

his forepaAvs , the squirrel rasps off the pointed end , and then splits the shell into two parts , just as a man AVOUM do ivitfi his knife ; the mouse merely drills a hole , so regularly round that it seems impossible that the work can have been clone without

some revolving instrument like a gimlet , and equaUy impossible that the kernel can have been extracted through so small an opening ; whilst the nut-hatch picks an irregularly-shaped ragged hole ivith its beak : and here crops out a remarkable feature in the little creature ' s proceedings

, which , if it be not actuated by reason , seems brought about by a quality very near akin to it ; the quadrupeds have paws Avherewith to hold the nut firm ; not so the bird ; but Nature teaches it to make up for tho deficiency by making an

extemporised vice of the cleft of a tree , crevice in a stone , or chink in some convenient gate-post . Whilst thus occupied the tappiiig _ of the bird ' s bill may be heard at a considerable distance ; this , mingling with other sounds , ancl making up tho Avhole of Nature

' s concert , led good Gilbert White jo propound the query in his "Natural History of Selborne " as to why passages of music , produced either vocally or instruiiiwitall y by human beings , should possess ™ e disagreeable property of continual

I' ^ urrenoe , even at most inopportune "' "os , so as at last to become well-ni gh ^ endurable , whilst the music of Nature ' s ewtr produces no such annoying effects . 'Hte quotes Gassendus in Vitd Peireslcii « Pon the point , and Wood , ivho edits "te , enlarges upon it , mentioning the th . y i ° us repeated sounds , such as c rattling of a railway carriage , resolving

themselves into a species of Aveird music . This latter circumstance is , Ave think , simply a case of memoiy or brain-adaptation , for Ave knoAV a lady , very musical hi instincts aud taste , AVIIO can tell instantl y any ordinary melody when chummed out with the finger-end upon a table . With

regard to the former , the fact mentioned by Gassendus and White seems to us to supply one more link in the chain of evidence of the impassable gulf between Man and the animals . Soul-less Nature may charm , but cannot strike a responsive

chord in soul-moved Man . The Music of Nature is soothing , even to the production of a pensive and holy calm ; that of Man ' s invention is soul-stirring , even to Avarlike deeds of blood . The music of Human moulding is tho stimulantthat of Nature ' s

, forming is the sedative . Both AviU one day be merged into the holy '' ' music of the spheres , " the soul-expected perfection of the Divine

Art" The triumph-song of Heaven . " Cold and crisp though the air may be getting noAA' , Ave shall still find one or two denizens of it fluttering about on their gauzy Avings on the few brief days of sunshine . There are the Clouded-Yellowthe

, Brimstone , and the common Copper , amongst the Butterflies , the caterpillar of Avhich last species may be found on the leaves of the Dock as late as the middle of December . Several Moths may also be observedthe Bed-greenthe Eed-headed

, , , the Autumnal , ancl , of course , the pale greyish-brown November Moth . Amongst our migratory or partially migratory birds is that pretty little , active , dashing HaAvk , the Hobby , ivhich never builds a nest if it can find an old one in

any Avay likely to suit it ; it usually affects the deserted tenements of the CI ' QAV or Magpie . Other tiny friends that come to us IIOAV are the Gold-crest ancl the Firecrest , Avhilst towards the end of the month the beautiful , but rather scarce , Waxwing

or Bohemian Chatterer makes its appearance . This bird has , upon some of the secondary feathers of the wing , a flat , horny , scarlet plate , looking as if made of red sealing-wax , Avhence its name ; the bird possesses , too , a handsome crest , Avhich it can raise or lower at pleasure . We reach the water-side , Avith just

“The Masonic Magazine: 1877-11-01, Page 15” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 26 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01111877/page/15/.
  • List
  • Grid
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.

which is just one of those pieces of apparently undesigned evidence of an all-ivise lS well as all-powerful Will permeating and regulating the Avhole course of Nature , which , when it thus incidentally crops out to the surface , stamps all Creation as the of GodThe Hazel

luincliAVOi'k . common or Wood-nut is eagerly devoured by three well-known , because commonly occurring , kinds of animal life—the Squirrel , the Field-mouse , and the Nut-hatch ; but each trets at the kernel in a different way , so

that finding , in the course of our walk , an emp ty nutshell , Ave are quite able to tell the creature that has opened it . Sitting on his haunches and holding the nut in

his forepaAvs , the squirrel rasps off the pointed end , and then splits the shell into two parts , just as a man AVOUM do ivitfi his knife ; the mouse merely drills a hole , so regularly round that it seems impossible that the work can have been clone without

some revolving instrument like a gimlet , and equaUy impossible that the kernel can have been extracted through so small an opening ; whilst the nut-hatch picks an irregularly-shaped ragged hole ivith its beak : and here crops out a remarkable feature in the little creature ' s proceedings

, which , if it be not actuated by reason , seems brought about by a quality very near akin to it ; the quadrupeds have paws Avherewith to hold the nut firm ; not so the bird ; but Nature teaches it to make up for tho deficiency by making an

extemporised vice of the cleft of a tree , crevice in a stone , or chink in some convenient gate-post . Whilst thus occupied the tappiiig _ of the bird ' s bill may be heard at a considerable distance ; this , mingling with other sounds , ancl making up tho Avhole of Nature

' s concert , led good Gilbert White jo propound the query in his "Natural History of Selborne " as to why passages of music , produced either vocally or instruiiiwitall y by human beings , should possess ™ e disagreeable property of continual

I' ^ urrenoe , even at most inopportune "' "os , so as at last to become well-ni gh ^ endurable , whilst the music of Nature ' s ewtr produces no such annoying effects . 'Hte quotes Gassendus in Vitd Peireslcii « Pon the point , and Wood , ivho edits "te , enlarges upon it , mentioning the th . y i ° us repeated sounds , such as c rattling of a railway carriage , resolving

themselves into a species of Aveird music . This latter circumstance is , Ave think , simply a case of memoiy or brain-adaptation , for Ave knoAV a lady , very musical hi instincts aud taste , AVIIO can tell instantl y any ordinary melody when chummed out with the finger-end upon a table . With

regard to the former , the fact mentioned by Gassendus and White seems to us to supply one more link in the chain of evidence of the impassable gulf between Man and the animals . Soul-less Nature may charm , but cannot strike a responsive

chord in soul-moved Man . The Music of Nature is soothing , even to the production of a pensive and holy calm ; that of Man ' s invention is soul-stirring , even to Avarlike deeds of blood . The music of Human moulding is tho stimulantthat of Nature ' s

, forming is the sedative . Both AviU one day be merged into the holy '' ' music of the spheres , " the soul-expected perfection of the Divine

Art" The triumph-song of Heaven . " Cold and crisp though the air may be getting noAA' , Ave shall still find one or two denizens of it fluttering about on their gauzy Avings on the few brief days of sunshine . There are the Clouded-Yellowthe

, Brimstone , and the common Copper , amongst the Butterflies , the caterpillar of Avhich last species may be found on the leaves of the Dock as late as the middle of December . Several Moths may also be observedthe Bed-greenthe Eed-headed

, , , the Autumnal , ancl , of course , the pale greyish-brown November Moth . Amongst our migratory or partially migratory birds is that pretty little , active , dashing HaAvk , the Hobby , ivhich never builds a nest if it can find an old one in

any Avay likely to suit it ; it usually affects the deserted tenements of the CI ' QAV or Magpie . Other tiny friends that come to us IIOAV are the Gold-crest ancl the Firecrest , Avhilst towards the end of the month the beautiful , but rather scarce , Waxwing

or Bohemian Chatterer makes its appearance . This bird has , upon some of the secondary feathers of the wing , a flat , horny , scarlet plate , looking as if made of red sealing-wax , Avhence its name ; the bird possesses , too , a handsome crest , Avhich it can raise or lower at pleasure . We reach the water-side , Avith just

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