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  • The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine
  • Jan. 26, 1859
  • Page 11
  • TO THE RETURNING SUN.
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, Jan. 26, 1859: Page 11

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    Article TO THE RETURNING SUN. Page 1 of 1
Page 11

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

To The Returning Sun.

TO THE RETURNING SUN .

BY THE SAME . Welcome , thou glorious spring of light and heat ! Where hast thou made thy long retreat—What lands thy warmer beams possest—What happy Indian worlds thy fruitful presence blest ? Where deep in the dark bosom of the ground

Thy wondrous operation ' s found ? Even there thy beams the earth refine , And mix , and stamp thy lustre through the dazzling mine . Since thy retreat so far from our cold isle , She never wore a lovely smile ; No joy her withered brow adorned

in dark unlovely days , and in long nights she mourned . The poor dejected beasts hung down their heads , And trembled on then - naked beds ; No footsteps of green life remain , But dying fields , and woods and a hare bleaky plain , The drooping birds were silent in the groves ,

They quite forgot their songs and loves ; Their feeble mates sat sullen by , We thought the feathered world resolved their land should die , But see ! the land revives at thy approach ; She blooms and quickens at thy touch ; Her kindled atoms life receive ,

'The meadows , and the groves , begin to stir and live . Mixed with thy beams the southern breezes blow , And help the sprouting births below . The infant flowers in haste appear , And gratefully return perfumes to the kind air . The trees , and fields , again look fresh and gay ,

The birds begin their softer play—Thou hast then - life , nay more , their love , restored—Their late and early hymns praise thee , their welcome lord . The spreading fire glides through the plains and woods , It even pierces the cold floods : The duller brutes feel the soft flame , The fishes leap for joy , and wanton in the stream .

HUMAN KNOWLEDGE—Man being the servant and interpreter of nature , can do and understand so much , aud so much only , as he has observed in fact or in thought of the coarse of nature : beyond this he neither knows anything nor can do anything . Novum Orgamm .

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1859-01-26, Page 11” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 15 July 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_26011859/page/11/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
THE MASONIC CHARITIES. Article 1
OUR ARCHITECTURAL CHAPTER. Article 3
MASONIC STATISTICS. Article 7
Selections. Article 10
TO THE RETURNING SUN. Article 11
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 12
THE PROVINCE OF SOMERSET. Article 15
COUNTRY LODGE ACCOMMODATION. Article 17
UNIVERSALITY OF FREEMASONRY. Article 18
MASONRY IN TASMANIA. Article 19
ASK , AND YE SHALL RECEIVE. Article 21
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 22
PROVINCIAL. Article 28
ROYAL ARCH. Article 37
KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. Article 38
SCOTLAND. Article 38
COLONIAL. Article 38
FRANCE. Article 40
MASONIC FESTIVITIES. Article 40
THE LATE BRO. THOMAS FEETAM. Article 41
THE WEEK. Article 43
PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 47
NOTICES. Article 48
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 48
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Page 11

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

To The Returning Sun.

TO THE RETURNING SUN .

BY THE SAME . Welcome , thou glorious spring of light and heat ! Where hast thou made thy long retreat—What lands thy warmer beams possest—What happy Indian worlds thy fruitful presence blest ? Where deep in the dark bosom of the ground

Thy wondrous operation ' s found ? Even there thy beams the earth refine , And mix , and stamp thy lustre through the dazzling mine . Since thy retreat so far from our cold isle , She never wore a lovely smile ; No joy her withered brow adorned

in dark unlovely days , and in long nights she mourned . The poor dejected beasts hung down their heads , And trembled on then - naked beds ; No footsteps of green life remain , But dying fields , and woods and a hare bleaky plain , The drooping birds were silent in the groves ,

They quite forgot their songs and loves ; Their feeble mates sat sullen by , We thought the feathered world resolved their land should die , But see ! the land revives at thy approach ; She blooms and quickens at thy touch ; Her kindled atoms life receive ,

'The meadows , and the groves , begin to stir and live . Mixed with thy beams the southern breezes blow , And help the sprouting births below . The infant flowers in haste appear , And gratefully return perfumes to the kind air . The trees , and fields , again look fresh and gay ,

The birds begin their softer play—Thou hast then - life , nay more , their love , restored—Their late and early hymns praise thee , their welcome lord . The spreading fire glides through the plains and woods , It even pierces the cold floods : The duller brutes feel the soft flame , The fishes leap for joy , and wanton in the stream .

HUMAN KNOWLEDGE—Man being the servant and interpreter of nature , can do and understand so much , aud so much only , as he has observed in fact or in thought of the coarse of nature : beyond this he neither knows anything nor can do anything . Novum Orgamm .

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