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  • The Masonic Magazine
  • Dec. 1, 1877
  • Page 88
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The Masonic Magazine, Dec. 1, 1877: Page 88

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    Article LOST AND SAVED; OR NELLIE POWERS THE MISSIONARY'S DAUGHTER. ← Page 5 of 5
    Article THE MAP OF EUROPE IN 1877. Page 1 of 3 →
Page 88

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

Lost And Saved; Or Nellie Powers The Missionary's Daughter.

" Why ! Tom , what ails you V asked Peter sympathizingly as he beheld Tom ' s cold appearance . "I ' m droAvnded so I be , Peter . Bad luck to the ' Sparkler , ' " he replied in a shivering voice . " She has been playing the dickens with me . My legs are froze solid in my boots , and I'm loike the Arctic ocean at tliis minute froze up intirely . There ' s icebergs hangin ' on to ears loike a lobster to fingerwhile my eyebrovrs and tbe hairs of my bead

my your , arc as stiff as the jib sheet has been for the last hour I ' ve been overbaulin" it , and—No one IOIOAVS IIOAV long Tom Avould have continued complaining hacl not the Avelcoming cry of " Eight bells " put a stop to him . NOAV came the tumbling up of one watch sloAvly on deck , ancl the lively tumbling doAvn of the other . ( To be Continued . )

The Map Of Europe In 1877.

THE MAP OF EUROPE IN 1877 .

BY PTOLEMY PIIILABELPHOS . THE most unobservant of those AVIIO are looking on " at the things which are coming on the . earth , " must be struck Avith the altered appearance which the Map of Europe is now assuming , and is likely yet to assume , and of tbe utter disappearance of

the higldy lauded , often fought for , " Balance of PoAver . " Indeed , it is not too much to say that , as understood of old time by statesmen and di plomatists , as so much cried up , so passionately contended for , it seems practically to have entered into the re < rion of " non existence , " to be absorbed , to be forgotten , put on one side , and destined apparently only to be remembered amid the dusty archives of official 2 iigeon-holes , or by those esteemed Dryasdusts of ours who are as useless as they are out of fashion in this easy-going , reckless generation . Indeed , Swift ' s lines must recur to some of us Avho think on such things at all :

"Now Europe ' s balanced , neither side prevails , For nothing ' s left in either of the scales . " Ancl yet the sarcasm of the Avitty Dean of St . Patrick ' s is hardly correct , for the real facts of the case , as will be seen by a careful study of the Map of Europe , appear to the unimpassioned observer and the neutral politician—to the Freemason , for instance Avithout any politics at all—geographically to be these : that Russia hovers

over Europe like a great bank of dark cloud , especially threatening Germany and dominating Hungary . We say this Avithout any political prepossession or personal feebng whatever , Avhich Avould be out of place in the MASONIC MAGAZINE . TO use the Spanish expression , Ave do so only " para hablar geograficalmente , " ( to speak geographically ) , and Ave do ' not presume to enter into tbe views of statesmen , or seek even to echo the cries of nationalities , all wliich things are far from tho peaceful dreamland of Freemasonry . But Ave take

up the Map of Europe as a stud y , and ivhen Ave have digested our thoughts , Avhat AVO remember , what we realise , ivhat AVO feel , Ave think it well , in a sphit of the purest philanthropy , to communicate the result to our very courteous readers . The Partition of Poland was , as the great Maria Theresa felt in her " Geist , " and honest y , a great mistake , and a greater crime . Say all that diplomatists and historians ttay say as to the iveakness , the folly , ancl the childishness of Polish internecine disputes -admitting that the Poles themselves Avere , as that able man Lord Malmesbury seems to intimate , the actual original seekers of Russian intervention , and the true cause of

“The Masonic Magazine: 1877-12-01, Page 88” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 24 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01121877/page/88/.
  • 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 88

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

Lost And Saved; Or Nellie Powers The Missionary's Daughter.

" Why ! Tom , what ails you V asked Peter sympathizingly as he beheld Tom ' s cold appearance . "I ' m droAvnded so I be , Peter . Bad luck to the ' Sparkler , ' " he replied in a shivering voice . " She has been playing the dickens with me . My legs are froze solid in my boots , and I'm loike the Arctic ocean at tliis minute froze up intirely . There ' s icebergs hangin ' on to ears loike a lobster to fingerwhile my eyebrovrs and tbe hairs of my bead

my your , arc as stiff as the jib sheet has been for the last hour I ' ve been overbaulin" it , and—No one IOIOAVS IIOAV long Tom Avould have continued complaining hacl not the Avelcoming cry of " Eight bells " put a stop to him . NOAV came the tumbling up of one watch sloAvly on deck , ancl the lively tumbling doAvn of the other . ( To be Continued . )

The Map Of Europe In 1877.

THE MAP OF EUROPE IN 1877 .

BY PTOLEMY PIIILABELPHOS . THE most unobservant of those AVIIO are looking on " at the things which are coming on the . earth , " must be struck Avith the altered appearance which the Map of Europe is now assuming , and is likely yet to assume , and of tbe utter disappearance of

the higldy lauded , often fought for , " Balance of PoAver . " Indeed , it is not too much to say that , as understood of old time by statesmen and di plomatists , as so much cried up , so passionately contended for , it seems practically to have entered into the re < rion of " non existence , " to be absorbed , to be forgotten , put on one side , and destined apparently only to be remembered amid the dusty archives of official 2 iigeon-holes , or by those esteemed Dryasdusts of ours who are as useless as they are out of fashion in this easy-going , reckless generation . Indeed , Swift ' s lines must recur to some of us Avho think on such things at all :

"Now Europe ' s balanced , neither side prevails , For nothing ' s left in either of the scales . " Ancl yet the sarcasm of the Avitty Dean of St . Patrick ' s is hardly correct , for the real facts of the case , as will be seen by a careful study of the Map of Europe , appear to the unimpassioned observer and the neutral politician—to the Freemason , for instance Avithout any politics at all—geographically to be these : that Russia hovers

over Europe like a great bank of dark cloud , especially threatening Germany and dominating Hungary . We say this Avithout any political prepossession or personal feebng whatever , Avhich Avould be out of place in the MASONIC MAGAZINE . TO use the Spanish expression , Ave do so only " para hablar geograficalmente , " ( to speak geographically ) , and Ave do ' not presume to enter into tbe views of statesmen , or seek even to echo the cries of nationalities , all wliich things are far from tho peaceful dreamland of Freemasonry . But Ave take

up the Map of Europe as a stud y , and ivhen Ave have digested our thoughts , Avhat AVO remember , what we realise , ivhat AVO feel , Ave think it well , in a sphit of the purest philanthropy , to communicate the result to our very courteous readers . The Partition of Poland was , as the great Maria Theresa felt in her " Geist , " and honest y , a great mistake , and a greater crime . Say all that diplomatists and historians ttay say as to the iveakness , the folly , ancl the childishness of Polish internecine disputes -admitting that the Poles themselves Avere , as that able man Lord Malmesbury seems to intimate , the actual original seekers of Russian intervention , and the true cause of

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