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  • Dec. 1, 1877
  • Page 57
  • FRIENDSHIP AND BROTHERHOOD.
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The Masonic Magazine, Dec. 1, 1877: Page 57

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    Article UNCLE CHARLES'S STORY. ← Page 4 of 4
    Article FRIENDSHIP AND BROTHERHOOD. Page 1 of 3 →
Page 57

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

Uncle Charles's Story.

" ' I do not know anything about that , ' he said , a little hastily ( police officers don ' t always like chaff , why f ) ' But if you Avant to see tbe end of our two friends of the Cafe , read it , that ' s all . The French police have done it very neatly , I must say—very neatly indeed ; and they give good sentences in France . They have each got five years at the Bagne , and police surveillance for ever . The 'Doctor' Avas very ' stout ; ' he is a precious sly old rascalbut Jackmann turned ' soft' ancl wanted to ' squeak' and said

; , , it was all his ' Sa femme mechante . ' He alivays Avas a bit of a cur . ' " ' Have you any command for the ' Little Village . ' he added , as he wished me good-bye . " ' No , ' I said ; ' I shall soon be again enjoying the " SAveet shady side of Pall Mall . "'

" 'Bon voyage !' " Well , I perused the Gazette des Tribunaux that evening , and two more thoroughgoing rapscallions I never read of before , aud a more Avell-deserved sentence was never passed . If it erred , it erred on the side of leniency . Voila ! mon histoire . " " Well , " said Ethel , " is that all 1 What have we to do Avith two ' polissons , ' and the ' police' and the Gazette des Tribunaux ?"

, " My moral ! " says Uncle Charles , loftily —( how fond some men are of moralising !) — " is this : Keep yourselves to yourselves ; do not be too free ancl easy in making acquaintances ; and , above all , do not be too intimate Avith any chance companion of Avhose antecedents you knoAv nothing . " The young ladies '' did not see it . " I can only trust that it Avill be quite different Avith my mdulgent reader .,

Friendship And Brotherhood.

FRIENDSHIP AND BROTHERHOOD .

BY G . SOJtEBg BELLAMY , Author of" The New fShateperiaii Dictionary of Quotations , " and Joint-Author of " Flirtation" ( Comedy ) . '' What need we have any friends , if we should never have need of them ? They were the most needless creatures living , should we ne'er have use for them , and would most resemble sweet instruments hung up in cases that keep their sounds to themselves . "—Timon of Athens , Act i ., se . 2 . "A friend should bear his friend ' s infirmities . "—Julius Ccesar , Act iv ., so . 3 . "We are bom to do benefits . "—Timon of Athens , Act i ., se . 2 .

IT is certain that no body or class of men Avill better understand ancl appreciate the noble words I have quoted above than Freemasons ; but they appeal to all Avith equal force , to every individual , to all classes , to aU nations . I could croAvd these pages Avith quotations from Shakspeare to demonstrate , if need existed , hoAv strongly he felt in the mattei of friendship , IIOAV keenly he appreciated the bond of brotherhood that should exist betAveen man and man , irrespective of race , colour or creed . The inherent selfishness of man , his

pride of birth or wealth or station , his absorption in the daily pursuit of his own wellbeing , and above all , perhapshis overbearing conceitin his o wnbrainpoAvers , and the individual vanity that makes him vieAv Avith such complacency his few good points through a magnifying glass , and his many faults through the wrong end of a telescope , reversing the process when he deals with his neighbour , have combined to someAvbat isolate Mm in the present day from the great virtue of that friendslri p , of which the poet has said , it was "to men and angels only given . " And rightly said—for true friendship is the least selfish of the many loves that exercise the human mind from infancy to age . I say the least selfish , because there is some grain of seMshness in every affection of the human heart—every good action ,

“The Masonic Magazine: 1877-12-01, Page 57” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 24 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01121877/page/57/.
  • 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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Page 57

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

Uncle Charles's Story.

" ' I do not know anything about that , ' he said , a little hastily ( police officers don ' t always like chaff , why f ) ' But if you Avant to see tbe end of our two friends of the Cafe , read it , that ' s all . The French police have done it very neatly , I must say—very neatly indeed ; and they give good sentences in France . They have each got five years at the Bagne , and police surveillance for ever . The 'Doctor' Avas very ' stout ; ' he is a precious sly old rascalbut Jackmann turned ' soft' ancl wanted to ' squeak' and said

; , , it was all his ' Sa femme mechante . ' He alivays Avas a bit of a cur . ' " ' Have you any command for the ' Little Village . ' he added , as he wished me good-bye . " ' No , ' I said ; ' I shall soon be again enjoying the " SAveet shady side of Pall Mall . "'

" 'Bon voyage !' " Well , I perused the Gazette des Tribunaux that evening , and two more thoroughgoing rapscallions I never read of before , aud a more Avell-deserved sentence was never passed . If it erred , it erred on the side of leniency . Voila ! mon histoire . " " Well , " said Ethel , " is that all 1 What have we to do Avith two ' polissons , ' and the ' police' and the Gazette des Tribunaux ?"

, " My moral ! " says Uncle Charles , loftily —( how fond some men are of moralising !) — " is this : Keep yourselves to yourselves ; do not be too free ancl easy in making acquaintances ; and , above all , do not be too intimate Avith any chance companion of Avhose antecedents you knoAv nothing . " The young ladies '' did not see it . " I can only trust that it Avill be quite different Avith my mdulgent reader .,

Friendship And Brotherhood.

FRIENDSHIP AND BROTHERHOOD .

BY G . SOJtEBg BELLAMY , Author of" The New fShateperiaii Dictionary of Quotations , " and Joint-Author of " Flirtation" ( Comedy ) . '' What need we have any friends , if we should never have need of them ? They were the most needless creatures living , should we ne'er have use for them , and would most resemble sweet instruments hung up in cases that keep their sounds to themselves . "—Timon of Athens , Act i ., se . 2 . "A friend should bear his friend ' s infirmities . "—Julius Ccesar , Act iv ., so . 3 . "We are bom to do benefits . "—Timon of Athens , Act i ., se . 2 .

IT is certain that no body or class of men Avill better understand ancl appreciate the noble words I have quoted above than Freemasons ; but they appeal to all Avith equal force , to every individual , to all classes , to aU nations . I could croAvd these pages Avith quotations from Shakspeare to demonstrate , if need existed , hoAv strongly he felt in the mattei of friendship , IIOAV keenly he appreciated the bond of brotherhood that should exist betAveen man and man , irrespective of race , colour or creed . The inherent selfishness of man , his

pride of birth or wealth or station , his absorption in the daily pursuit of his own wellbeing , and above all , perhapshis overbearing conceitin his o wnbrainpoAvers , and the individual vanity that makes him vieAv Avith such complacency his few good points through a magnifying glass , and his many faults through the wrong end of a telescope , reversing the process when he deals with his neighbour , have combined to someAvbat isolate Mm in the present day from the great virtue of that friendslri p , of which the poet has said , it was "to men and angels only given . " And rightly said—for true friendship is the least selfish of the many loves that exercise the human mind from infancy to age . I say the least selfish , because there is some grain of seMshness in every affection of the human heart—every good action ,

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