Skip to main content
Museum of Freemasonry

Masonic Periodicals Online

  • Explore
  • Advanced Search
  • Home
  • Explore
  • The Masonic Magazine
  • March 1, 1877
  • Page 15
Current:

The Masonic Magazine, March 1, 1877: Page 15

  • Back to The Masonic Magazine, March 1, 1877
  • Print image
  • Articles/Ads
    Article LIFE'S ROLL-CALL. ← Page 2 of 3 →
Page 15

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

Life's Roll-Call.

universe . What is termed individual responsibility comprehends the law of equity iu all relative obligations . None can avoid it , because it rules the princip les of justice and right , in every one of life ' s relationships . Even the

romance of life may not obscure it , as stern realities all make their impress as if written with an iron pen and laid in the rock for ever . The rapid transitions of our years can not obliterate the turpitude of our crimes

or bedim the g lory of our virtues , for the one covers us with a mantle of darkness , while the others cling to us like the ivy to the wall , with even a deathless tenacity . Errors in life are but a common inheritancefor all men err , all are weakand at

, , times do wrong , often when they do not intend it . From infancy to age , when the life roll is called , we answer from the positions which are given us , conscious as we are in most instances of our own

integrity . For the general way we do not condemn ourselves , even when we see our own sinfulness , when we know our own wrongs , and are aware of our numerous shortcomings . Men are but grown-up children , and even in childhood we always count one in the make-up of the world ' s

numerals . Though we are then weak and helpless and incapable of an act of' individual responsibility , we are that early endowed with power , and sustain no insignificant position in the world's roll call of life . We are then on the arena already , where

divinity shines in us and through us , and where we have rights and powers of development and possess attractive innocency and loveliness ivhich none but the inhuman "will ever ignore . Even then the eyes of loveenduring loveare fastened on us

, , , and often the pencil of thought , with the inspiration of poetic fire , paints our being and tells our life story as a mournful sample of what sooner or later befalls us all .

How truthfully and beautifully one has written of such young life , when he says : I saw an infant in its mother ' s arms , And left it sleeping ; i ears passed—I saw a girl with woman's charms In sorrow weeping :

Years passed ; I saw a mother with her child , And o ' er it languish ; Years brought me back . Yet through her tears she smiled , In deeper anguish .

I left her ; years had vanished—I returned And stood before her . A lamp beside the childless widow burned , Grief ' s mantle o ' er her . In tears I found her whom I left in tears , On God relying , And I returned again in after years And found her dying .

An infant first , and then a maiden fair , A wife , a mother . And then a childless widow in despair Thus met a brother . 'Tis thus we meet on earth , and thus we part To meet , O , never 1 Till death beholds the spirit leave the heart To live for ever . "

JNo , not even the hel pless infant is left out in the roll call of life . It is , in itself , endowed with entity , simple , beautiful and immortal , and represents the highest actual purity of this world of sin . In after years , when the child grows to young manhood , its identity is none the

less concealed , for the young man is his father's hope and his mother ' s pride , and his name , under the influence of parental prestige , begins to assume importance even in the books of life . 'Tis then we see that " the boy is father to the man , " and on him

we call the life-roll with renewed promise and assurance . AVe know it is sad , but then it is true , that many at this point are most mysteriously numbered among the missing . Somehow they drop out , as we often see

them , even from the ranks of the Mystic Tie , but for what cause we know not . Many need guardianship in manhood as well as in youth , and the watch-care of churches and fraternal societies has doubtless been made a blessing to millions .

The thoughtful , the reflective , may stand firm anywhere . They have studied the philosophy of self-reliance , and they are always ready to answer the roll . They

“The Masonic Magazine: 1877-03-01, Page 15” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 13 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01031877/page/15/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
Monthly Masonic Summary. Article 1
THE "ARMS" OF THE FREEMASONS IN ENGLAND. Article 2
THE REV. MR. PANDI AND FREEMASONRY. Article 3
WONDERS OF OPERATIVE MASONRY. Article 4
LETTER OF BRO. W. J. HUGHAN, OF ENGLAND, TO THE GRAND LODGE OF OHIO. Article 8
AN OLD, OLD STORY. Article 11
LIFE'S LESSON. Article 14
LIFE'S ROLL-CALL. Article 14
A SOFT ANSWER. Article 16
SOCIAL PROBLEMS AND THEIR PEACEFUL SOLUTION. Article 16
SONNET. Article 20
AN ORATION UPON MASONRY. Article 20
THE ENCHANTED ISLE OF THE SEA. Article 23
A CENTENNIAL CURIOSITY. Article 26
A LONDONER'S VISIT TO A NORTH YORK DALE. Article 27
DONT TAKE IT TO HEART. Article 29
THE ANCIENT MYSTERIES AND MODERN FREEMASONRY; THEIR ANALOGIES CONSIDERED. Article 30
THE LADY MURIEL. Article 32
THIS MORGAN AFFAIR. Article 36
FREEMASONRY IN AMERICA. Article 39
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE AND ART. Article 41
LEEDLE YACOB STRAUSS. Article 44
NOTES BY FATHER FOY ON HIS SECOND LECTURE. Article 45
Hunt's Playing Cards. Article 49
Dick Radclyffe and Co's Illustrated Catalogue of Seeds. Article 49
The Cosmopolitan Masonic Calendar, Diary, and Pocket Book for 1877. Article 49
GEORGE KENNING, MASONIC PUBLISHER Article 50
Page 1

Page 1

1 Article
Page 2

Page 2

1 Article
Page 3

Page 3

2 Articles
Page 4

Page 4

3 Articles
Page 5

Page 5

1 Article
Page 6

Page 6

1 Article
Page 7

Page 7

1 Article
Page 8

Page 8

2 Articles
Page 9

Page 9

1 Article
Page 10

Page 10

1 Article
Page 11

Page 11

3 Articles
Page 12

Page 12

1 Article
Page 13

Page 13

1 Article
Page 14

Page 14

3 Articles
Page 15

Page 15

1 Article
Page 16

Page 16

4 Articles
Page 17

Page 17

1 Article
Page 18

Page 18

1 Article
Page 19

Page 19

1 Article
Page 20

Page 20

4 Articles
Page 21

Page 21

1 Article
Page 22

Page 22

1 Article
Page 23

Page 23

2 Articles
Page 24

Page 24

1 Article
Page 25

Page 25

1 Article
Page 26

Page 26

2 Articles
Page 27

Page 27

3 Articles
Page 28

Page 28

1 Article
Page 29

Page 29

3 Articles
Page 30

Page 30

1 Article
Page 31

Page 31

1 Article
Page 32

Page 32

3 Articles
Page 33

Page 33

1 Article
Page 34

Page 34

1 Article
Page 35

Page 35

1 Article
Page 36

Page 36

2 Articles
Page 37

Page 37

1 Article
Page 38

Page 38

1 Article
Page 39

Page 39

2 Articles
Page 40

Page 40

1 Article
Page 41

Page 41

3 Articles
Page 42

Page 42

1 Article
Page 43

Page 43

1 Article
Page 44

Page 44

2 Articles
Page 45

Page 45

1 Article
Page 46

Page 46

1 Article
Page 47

Page 47

1 Article
Page 48

Page 48

1 Article
Page 49

Page 49

4 Articles
Page 50

Page 50

1 Article
Page 15

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

Life's Roll-Call.

universe . What is termed individual responsibility comprehends the law of equity iu all relative obligations . None can avoid it , because it rules the princip les of justice and right , in every one of life ' s relationships . Even the

romance of life may not obscure it , as stern realities all make their impress as if written with an iron pen and laid in the rock for ever . The rapid transitions of our years can not obliterate the turpitude of our crimes

or bedim the g lory of our virtues , for the one covers us with a mantle of darkness , while the others cling to us like the ivy to the wall , with even a deathless tenacity . Errors in life are but a common inheritancefor all men err , all are weakand at

, , times do wrong , often when they do not intend it . From infancy to age , when the life roll is called , we answer from the positions which are given us , conscious as we are in most instances of our own

integrity . For the general way we do not condemn ourselves , even when we see our own sinfulness , when we know our own wrongs , and are aware of our numerous shortcomings . Men are but grown-up children , and even in childhood we always count one in the make-up of the world ' s

numerals . Though we are then weak and helpless and incapable of an act of' individual responsibility , we are that early endowed with power , and sustain no insignificant position in the world's roll call of life . We are then on the arena already , where

divinity shines in us and through us , and where we have rights and powers of development and possess attractive innocency and loveliness ivhich none but the inhuman "will ever ignore . Even then the eyes of loveenduring loveare fastened on us

, , , and often the pencil of thought , with the inspiration of poetic fire , paints our being and tells our life story as a mournful sample of what sooner or later befalls us all .

How truthfully and beautifully one has written of such young life , when he says : I saw an infant in its mother ' s arms , And left it sleeping ; i ears passed—I saw a girl with woman's charms In sorrow weeping :

Years passed ; I saw a mother with her child , And o ' er it languish ; Years brought me back . Yet through her tears she smiled , In deeper anguish .

I left her ; years had vanished—I returned And stood before her . A lamp beside the childless widow burned , Grief ' s mantle o ' er her . In tears I found her whom I left in tears , On God relying , And I returned again in after years And found her dying .

An infant first , and then a maiden fair , A wife , a mother . And then a childless widow in despair Thus met a brother . 'Tis thus we meet on earth , and thus we part To meet , O , never 1 Till death beholds the spirit leave the heart To live for ever . "

JNo , not even the hel pless infant is left out in the roll call of life . It is , in itself , endowed with entity , simple , beautiful and immortal , and represents the highest actual purity of this world of sin . In after years , when the child grows to young manhood , its identity is none the

less concealed , for the young man is his father's hope and his mother ' s pride , and his name , under the influence of parental prestige , begins to assume importance even in the books of life . 'Tis then we see that " the boy is father to the man , " and on him

we call the life-roll with renewed promise and assurance . AVe know it is sad , but then it is true , that many at this point are most mysteriously numbered among the missing . Somehow they drop out , as we often see

them , even from the ranks of the Mystic Tie , but for what cause we know not . Many need guardianship in manhood as well as in youth , and the watch-care of churches and fraternal societies has doubtless been made a blessing to millions .

The thoughtful , the reflective , may stand firm anywhere . They have studied the philosophy of self-reliance , and they are always ready to answer the roll . They

  • Prev page
  • 1
  • 14
  • You're on page15
  • 16
  • 50
  • Next page
  • Accredited Museum Designated Outstanding Collection
  • LIBRARY AND MUSEUM CHARITABLE TRUST OF THE UNITED GRAND LODGE OF ENGLAND REGISTERED CHARITY NUMBER 1058497 / ALL RIGHTS RESERVED © 2025

  • Accessibility statement

  • Designed, developed, and maintained by King's Digital Lab

We use cookies to track usage and preferences.

Privacy & cookie policy