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  • Dec. 1, 1877
  • Page 19
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The Masonic Magazine, Dec. 1, 1877: Page 19

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    Article ARRIVALS, SURVIVALS, AND REVIVALS. ← Page 5 of 7 →
Page 19

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

Arrivals, Survivals, And Revivals.

may I say humble and halting 1—posture , lumbering ungracefully through the portals ul that dilapidated and , proh pudor ! still surviving excrescence , Temple Bar . I was about to preface the cripple ' s title with the adjective " old , " but it has not even that respectable title to our regard . There is a survival for you 1 Pace Sir George Bowyer—but never mind , bis Avell-known principles rogarclnig our ancient mystery afford a sufficient guarantee against his ever reading these lines—this bastard copy of a

spurious order of architecture has not a single claim to our reverence . It recalls the bad old days Avhen principles the most diametrically opposed to those of the Masonic body ruled rampant ; Avhen men Avere persecuted for conscience sake ; Avhen no man dared to speak the thing he Avould ; Avhen Ketch ' s halter and quartering knife never lacked employment , ancl that , not on the nocks and limbs of thieves ancl murderers , but

on the throbbing frames of patriots and statesmen . The bad old times , Avhen French gold supplied the luxuries of au English monarch's seraglio ; . vlien an enemy ' s cannon roared defiance in the port of London ; Avhen men , high in rank and in the councils of their sovereign , yearned for a reiwal of the tyrannies of the Star Chamber and High Commission ; ancl Avhen a Recorder of the ronoivned city , " the nursing mother of freedom , " in tbe year that saw the moribund nicumbrance reared , dared to assert . that it

Avould never be good time in England until the Inquisition was introduced !* But to turn to the arrival that didn't arrive . Alfred De Musset has put it upon record that " the first duty of Avine is to be red . " I will anticipate the obvious pun of some Avitty critic that that is also the first obligation of a Magazine article . NOAV I conceh'e that the first duty of an obelisk is to appear in a A ertical position , and so I hereby enter my protest against the manner of the debut of the Needle ' s canvas and scantlingrepresentative in Lord Mayor ' s Show , albeit the humiliating posture it ivas made to

assume was of course Avholly due to the monstrous survival I have been denouncing . But just fancy how I could haA r e button-holed you , gentle reader , while I poured forth a AAdiole Hood of lore upon Barneses and Thothmes , and Scarabei , and Osiris , and Isis , ancl hieroglyphic ivriters ancl records in stone generally , had the obelisk associated AVWI the name of the " serpent of Old _ N"ilo" arrived in time . Why , I have no doubt that I could Inove proved to demonstration from the indentations upon that piece of syanite , that Moses Avas a Mason and Past Master of a Lodge meeting at Thebesancl lease don't retort

; p that all this illustration can be derived as well from photographs or from our learned and worshipful brother ' s interesting brochure upon this interesting subject . Photographs won't do for me . There is a turn of the hand in the real thing incapable of reproduction by the graver of the Avoodcutter , discernible only by the esoteric , a secret to the exoteric

A Masons work is recognised only by a Mason , though here , at ab events , in this splendid presentation is a work trul y Masonic , if only in the display of the munificent and enlightened liberality of our worthy and Avorshipful brother , Dr . Erasmus Wilson . Let us hope that ere long the adventurous monolith may afford us all the opportunity Ave desire of a closer investigation , when it displaces its rather shabby simulacrum on St . Stephen ' s Green . But is this looked for arrival wholly Avithout association of a survival ? Alas no ! There survive widows and children of six gallant British seamenAvhoin a service Avhich all Avill

, , recognise as truly Masonic , died at the post of duty , of that highest duty of a sailor , to succour and to save his messmate . Let the records of eveyy Lodge midev the banner of that constitution , of Avhich the donor is so illustrious a member , bear some remembrance of the pathetic legacy the brave souls have left us . To shed your blood in doing your duty is a tradition familiar to every Master Mason . What did these dead men do less ? Let their memories be a survival , and let the care of and love for their sorroAving survivors remain an imperishable

“The Masonic Magazine: 1877-12-01, Page 19” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 24 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01121877/page/19/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
A christmas Greeting. Article 2
BRO. CAPTAIN JOHN N. PHILIPS. Article 3
SONNET. Article 3
OLD BUILDINGS IN FLEET STREET. Article 4
COLE'S LIST OF LODGES, 1763. Article 5
A LIST OF REGULAR LODGES, Article 5
LET US BE KIND. Article 14
ARRIVALS, SURVIVALS, AND REVIVALS. Article 15
A TALE OF LOVE. Article 21
MRS. FEBNBRAKE'S "LUCKY BIRD." Article 22
CHRISTMAS EVE. Article 28
THE WORK OF NATURE IN THE MONTHS. Article 30
FROM LISBON TO BELEM. Article 37
A PORTRAIT. Article 41
THE ADVENTURES OF DON PASQUALE. Article 42
A CHAPTER ON OAKS. Article 44
MISERY. Article 49
MASONRY—ITS PAST AND FUTURE. Article 51
UNCLE CHARLES'S STORY. Article 54
FRIENDSHIP AND BROTHERHOOD. Article 57
SONNET. Article 59
EXTRACTS FROM THE RECORDS OF AN OLD ASSEMBLY OF KNIGHTS TEMPLAR MEETING AT BOLTON. Article 59
A MODERN NOVEL SOMEWHAT UNDERVALUED. Article 61
CABINET OF MASONIC CURIOSITIES. Article 63
TO MRS. BRYANT. Article 64
THE PROPOSED SPELLING REFORM. Article 64
REACHING AFTER THE UNATTAINABLE.* Article 66
Reviews. Article 67
THE POETIC INTERPRETATION OF NATURE.* Article 70
Untitled Article 70
HOW MR. JOSS FAILED TO BE MADE A MASON. Article 75
AMABEL VAUGHAN. Article 77
A CHRISTMAS MEMORY. 1877. Article 82
Untitled Article 83
LOST AND SAVED; OR NELLIE POWERS THE MISSIONARY'S DAUGHTER. Article 84
THE MAP OF EUROPE IN 1877. Article 88
A GOOD HONEST HEART. Article 90
THE INCONCLUSIVENESS AND ABERRATIONS OF SCIENTIFIC TEACHERS. Article 91
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE AND ART. Article 93
A FREEMASON'S CHRISTMAS THOUGHTS. Article 95
ANSWER TO ACROSTIC. Article 97
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Arrivals, Survivals, And Revivals.

may I say humble and halting 1—posture , lumbering ungracefully through the portals ul that dilapidated and , proh pudor ! still surviving excrescence , Temple Bar . I was about to preface the cripple ' s title with the adjective " old , " but it has not even that respectable title to our regard . There is a survival for you 1 Pace Sir George Bowyer—but never mind , bis Avell-known principles rogarclnig our ancient mystery afford a sufficient guarantee against his ever reading these lines—this bastard copy of a

spurious order of architecture has not a single claim to our reverence . It recalls the bad old days Avhen principles the most diametrically opposed to those of the Masonic body ruled rampant ; Avhen men Avere persecuted for conscience sake ; Avhen no man dared to speak the thing he Avould ; Avhen Ketch ' s halter and quartering knife never lacked employment , ancl that , not on the nocks and limbs of thieves ancl murderers , but

on the throbbing frames of patriots and statesmen . The bad old times , Avhen French gold supplied the luxuries of au English monarch's seraglio ; . vlien an enemy ' s cannon roared defiance in the port of London ; Avhen men , high in rank and in the councils of their sovereign , yearned for a reiwal of the tyrannies of the Star Chamber and High Commission ; ancl Avhen a Recorder of the ronoivned city , " the nursing mother of freedom , " in tbe year that saw the moribund nicumbrance reared , dared to assert . that it

Avould never be good time in England until the Inquisition was introduced !* But to turn to the arrival that didn't arrive . Alfred De Musset has put it upon record that " the first duty of Avine is to be red . " I will anticipate the obvious pun of some Avitty critic that that is also the first obligation of a Magazine article . NOAV I conceh'e that the first duty of an obelisk is to appear in a A ertical position , and so I hereby enter my protest against the manner of the debut of the Needle ' s canvas and scantlingrepresentative in Lord Mayor ' s Show , albeit the humiliating posture it ivas made to

assume was of course Avholly due to the monstrous survival I have been denouncing . But just fancy how I could haA r e button-holed you , gentle reader , while I poured forth a AAdiole Hood of lore upon Barneses and Thothmes , and Scarabei , and Osiris , and Isis , ancl hieroglyphic ivriters ancl records in stone generally , had the obelisk associated AVWI the name of the " serpent of Old _ N"ilo" arrived in time . Why , I have no doubt that I could Inove proved to demonstration from the indentations upon that piece of syanite , that Moses Avas a Mason and Past Master of a Lodge meeting at Thebesancl lease don't retort

; p that all this illustration can be derived as well from photographs or from our learned and worshipful brother ' s interesting brochure upon this interesting subject . Photographs won't do for me . There is a turn of the hand in the real thing incapable of reproduction by the graver of the Avoodcutter , discernible only by the esoteric , a secret to the exoteric

A Masons work is recognised only by a Mason , though here , at ab events , in this splendid presentation is a work trul y Masonic , if only in the display of the munificent and enlightened liberality of our worthy and Avorshipful brother , Dr . Erasmus Wilson . Let us hope that ere long the adventurous monolith may afford us all the opportunity Ave desire of a closer investigation , when it displaces its rather shabby simulacrum on St . Stephen ' s Green . But is this looked for arrival wholly Avithout association of a survival ? Alas no ! There survive widows and children of six gallant British seamenAvhoin a service Avhich all Avill

, , recognise as truly Masonic , died at the post of duty , of that highest duty of a sailor , to succour and to save his messmate . Let the records of eveyy Lodge midev the banner of that constitution , of Avhich the donor is so illustrious a member , bear some remembrance of the pathetic legacy the brave souls have left us . To shed your blood in doing your duty is a tradition familiar to every Master Mason . What did these dead men do less ? Let their memories be a survival , and let the care of and love for their sorroAving survivors remain an imperishable

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