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  • Dec. 1, 1877
  • Page 58
  • FRIENDSHIP AND BROTHERHOOD.
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The Masonic Magazine, Dec. 1, 1877: Page 58

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Friendship And Brotherhood.

every noble impluse , every motive can be traced to love of self . The " grand passion , " 0 f which every poet of every country has Avritten , and Avritten his best , to extol ancl ethejoalize , hiding the one black spot Avith many words , diverting the attention from Avhat it really is to the grand castle in the ah' wherein dwells tbe might be , is of all human loves the least worthy , for it has its origin in the selfish passions which appeal to the lower nature of man as an animal . Man freed from tbe flesh has no need of the " grand passion , " Ijiit whether in the flesh or in the spirit his higher nature can never dispense Avith that love which we call friendship—the sweet intellectual sympathy , the intercommunion of . oiurfinial souls .

But friendship , like everything else in this age of progress , has lost much of the vigour , because much of the self-abnegation which characterized this virtue Avhen science hacl not attained those glorious dimensions which turns all things , but progress in materialism , into ridicule . The modern progressionist would reduce friendship to a science . If this cannot be done , then he bids you shelve the " sweet instrument , " that it may keep its sound to itself ancl in a case too , lest some stray breeze call it into feeble play . The great ancl

noble friendship between man and man , Avhich , like sunrays , have served to relieve the dull and bloody canvass of man ' s history , "become fewer ancl fewer as the progress of the age teaches us the art of a greater selfishness ancl invites us to laugh Avhere once we Avept , ancl never to weep at all . There seems to be left no room in a man ' s heart UOAV , no vacant spot ¦ wherein he can bide Ms friend ' s faults . ; he cannot bear Ms friend ' s infirmities , so , in another sense , he bares them to all the Avorld .

Li his terse , epigrammatical way , Shakspoare comes to the very pith of his subject'by the question , " What need we have any Mends if we should never have need of them ? " He cloes not hnply , as the progressionist Avould doubtless argue , that Ave must make use of our friends and be careful our friends make no use of us , but he means that it is the need , tho necessity , the adversity that calls for the display of friendsliip ; that if Ave have no need , then , indeed , would friendship be a mere fashion , a toy misnamed after tbe honoured dead . The one grand need , however , which must ever be a powerful reason why man , more

gregarious than any other animal , cannot exist Avith any degree of happiness without some kind of friendship , is Ms craving , Avhether in joy or grief , for sympathy . Man only finds the sympathy he desires in Ms brother man ; a woman ' s sympathy , though often given when Avitbheld by man , is but a poor ancl chilling substitute ; not purposely so , but naturally , for the very fact that Avoman was designed to supply man with the wants of his lower nature , precludes her from ever entering into the sacred precmcts of his inner soul . Friendshi p is tbe Mgbest form of human love , ancl is therefore only given to the highest of

tho human race— "to men ancl angels only given . " After the affection as betAveen one man and another must come the love , the feeling of brotherhood that should link all men in the imion of a united family . " We were bom to do benefits ; " this should be the axiom to supplant the grossly selfish , unchristian phrase so prevalent in this age of progress , of "Every man for himself and God for us all . " If every man be but for himself , be sure God will be for none . And I have marked of late that even this quasi-Christian termination of " God for us all , " that comes in bke a " God have mercy on your soul" after a sentence of capital punishment , is often omitted , and "Every man for himself" is passed

hom mouth to mouth , is enacted clay by clay and , may be , to the satisfaction of the progressionist , is passing into a perfect science in its completeness of perfect selfishness . The idea of brotherhood Avhich must of necessity embrace the Shaksperian axiom , " We are born to do benefits , " seems to be confined to bodies or cliques of men , ancl pre-eminently , Perhaps , to Freemasonry , and does not extend as it should to all classes of men in a Christian country . Our national sense of brotherhood , Avhich should be a broad-minded cosmopolitan charit

y Avhich knoAVS of no religious prejudice , no political bias , no prejudgment because ° i caste or race or colour , has degenerated into a narroAv Samaritanism tainted with the spirit of the Levite—a Samaritanism that savours of the feeble charity of Exeter Hall , that would aid and then pass on the other side—a Samaritanism that can never grasp the sense ° 1 true brotherhood conveyed in the words of our Poet , " It is not enough to help the feeble % but to support Mm aftenvards . " The temper of true brotherhood is to overcome illaeeds by good returns , to leave the world a little better than Ave found it , to have a high

“The Masonic Magazine: 1877-12-01, Page 58” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 28 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01121877/page/58/.
  • 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 58

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

Friendship And Brotherhood.

every noble impluse , every motive can be traced to love of self . The " grand passion , " 0 f which every poet of every country has Avritten , and Avritten his best , to extol ancl ethejoalize , hiding the one black spot Avith many words , diverting the attention from Avhat it really is to the grand castle in the ah' wherein dwells tbe might be , is of all human loves the least worthy , for it has its origin in the selfish passions which appeal to the lower nature of man as an animal . Man freed from tbe flesh has no need of the " grand passion , " Ijiit whether in the flesh or in the spirit his higher nature can never dispense Avith that love which we call friendship—the sweet intellectual sympathy , the intercommunion of . oiurfinial souls .

But friendship , like everything else in this age of progress , has lost much of the vigour , because much of the self-abnegation which characterized this virtue Avhen science hacl not attained those glorious dimensions which turns all things , but progress in materialism , into ridicule . The modern progressionist would reduce friendship to a science . If this cannot be done , then he bids you shelve the " sweet instrument , " that it may keep its sound to itself ancl in a case too , lest some stray breeze call it into feeble play . The great ancl

noble friendship between man and man , Avhich , like sunrays , have served to relieve the dull and bloody canvass of man ' s history , "become fewer ancl fewer as the progress of the age teaches us the art of a greater selfishness ancl invites us to laugh Avhere once we Avept , ancl never to weep at all . There seems to be left no room in a man ' s heart UOAV , no vacant spot ¦ wherein he can bide Ms friend ' s faults . ; he cannot bear Ms friend ' s infirmities , so , in another sense , he bares them to all the Avorld .

Li his terse , epigrammatical way , Shakspoare comes to the very pith of his subject'by the question , " What need we have any Mends if we should never have need of them ? " He cloes not hnply , as the progressionist Avould doubtless argue , that Ave must make use of our friends and be careful our friends make no use of us , but he means that it is the need , tho necessity , the adversity that calls for the display of friendsliip ; that if Ave have no need , then , indeed , would friendship be a mere fashion , a toy misnamed after tbe honoured dead . The one grand need , however , which must ever be a powerful reason why man , more

gregarious than any other animal , cannot exist Avith any degree of happiness without some kind of friendship , is Ms craving , Avhether in joy or grief , for sympathy . Man only finds the sympathy he desires in Ms brother man ; a woman ' s sympathy , though often given when Avitbheld by man , is but a poor ancl chilling substitute ; not purposely so , but naturally , for the very fact that Avoman was designed to supply man with the wants of his lower nature , precludes her from ever entering into the sacred precmcts of his inner soul . Friendshi p is tbe Mgbest form of human love , ancl is therefore only given to the highest of

tho human race— "to men ancl angels only given . " After the affection as betAveen one man and another must come the love , the feeling of brotherhood that should link all men in the imion of a united family . " We were bom to do benefits ; " this should be the axiom to supplant the grossly selfish , unchristian phrase so prevalent in this age of progress , of "Every man for himself and God for us all . " If every man be but for himself , be sure God will be for none . And I have marked of late that even this quasi-Christian termination of " God for us all , " that comes in bke a " God have mercy on your soul" after a sentence of capital punishment , is often omitted , and "Every man for himself" is passed

hom mouth to mouth , is enacted clay by clay and , may be , to the satisfaction of the progressionist , is passing into a perfect science in its completeness of perfect selfishness . The idea of brotherhood Avhich must of necessity embrace the Shaksperian axiom , " We are born to do benefits , " seems to be confined to bodies or cliques of men , ancl pre-eminently , Perhaps , to Freemasonry , and does not extend as it should to all classes of men in a Christian country . Our national sense of brotherhood , Avhich should be a broad-minded cosmopolitan charit

y Avhich knoAVS of no religious prejudice , no political bias , no prejudgment because ° i caste or race or colour , has degenerated into a narroAv Samaritanism tainted with the spirit of the Levite—a Samaritanism that savours of the feeble charity of Exeter Hall , that would aid and then pass on the other side—a Samaritanism that can never grasp the sense ° 1 true brotherhood conveyed in the words of our Poet , " It is not enough to help the feeble % but to support Mm aftenvards . " The temper of true brotherhood is to overcome illaeeds by good returns , to leave the world a little better than Ave found it , to have a high

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