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  • The Masonic Magazine
  • April 1, 1877
  • Page 37
  • ON THE EXCESSIVE INFLUENCE OF WOMEM.
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The Masonic Magazine, April 1, 1877: Page 37

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Page 37

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

On The Excessive Influence Of Womem.

"But of what consequence 1 Theres the rub . That inherent and ineradicable love of appearances , of which I have already spoken , and which causes a woman to prefer the look of things to the substance of them , steps in to settle the question . By

» consequence" she means visible power , influence , and consideration . She wishes her husband to be a considerable person . Would she rather that he was a member of Parliament , though of little parliamentary distinction , or a scientific man of

much true distinction , but little talked about and less rewarded ? Would she rather that he were an Under-Secretary of State or , in other words , a conspicuous upper clerk , or a poet—say , like Wordsworth or Shelley—the scorn of bis generation , though certain to be the delight of the next ? AVould she rather that her husband had written the ' Ode to the

Skylark' or were Lord Lieutenant of Ireland ? The question , alas ! requires no

answer . " Then see the consequence ! Women , through the excessive influence they now exercise , are perpetually assisting to lower the standard of the objects of life , and of the qualities which deserve admiration aud reward . Their practical dispositions tend

to banish all the nobler and less directly remunerative pursuits from existence , to circumscribe the sphere of man ' s energies , and to make him a vulgar athlete in a vulgar arena . Their natural instincts are all for the goodthe virtuousthe

, , domestic , but still the small . Their acquired social instincts are all for the magnificent but the mean , for the showy but the sordid . If you once get them to take an interest in a man ' s being something more than the exemplary bead

of a household , all they then want him to he is to be rich , conspicuous , and powerful . They are utterly indifferent to posthumous fame , and not much more concerned about contemporary fame , unless it happens to be synonymous with notoriety . They

would infinitely sooner that their husband ' s horse won the Derby than that he wrote ' Hamlet' or discovered Neptune . " It is not in the nature of things that the influence of women should have attained the proportion it has reached in our days without the consequences being mirrored m those three most faithful of reflectors ,

religious worship , literature , and the stage . Perhaps I tread on delicate ground , and show myself more of an old fogey than ever , when I express my distaste for those ecclesiastical fripperies which have of late years invaded the once plain ancl masculine ceremonies of the Anglican Church .

By a combination between women and certain ecclesiastical Epicenes , the vestments , the incense , the bowings and scrapings , the auricular confession , and the mystic dogmas of Papal worship are swarming around Reformed altarsandthanks to the

, , excessive influence of women , the church is being rapidly approximated to the theatre . " And in the theatre itself , what has the prevailing , the predominent influence of women done for us 1 It may be said that

it has purged the drama of coarse and offensive language , and , old fogey as I am , I cheerfully allow that it has had this excellent result . But whilst exrocising one devil it has let in a number of others , not so palpably objectionable , but more

subtly noxious . Our ears are no longer offended by foul language , but our eyes have seen , and still see , much that is scarcely calculated to edify , and which meets with no protest from women ; while our sense is insulted by paltry or sensational plays which our manly forefathers would have hissed off the boards . The heroic has

been driven from the stage , and the domestic and sentimental have usurped the ground it once proudly trod . The wars of kings , the clash of arms , the wrongs of a Lear , the tottering wickedness of a Macbeth , the jealous fury and tenderness of an Othello , the hearty laughter of a Falstaff , the incantations of witches and the frolics

of fairies , have been exchanged for the sorrows of a blacksmith , the peculations of a city clerk , the simpering of waitingmaids , the virtues of ticket-ofleave men , and the effete puns and horse-collar grins of inconsequent burlesques . The sentimental and the frivolous—these are truly

feminine states of mind—ancl the excessive influence of women has transferred them to the British theatre . People avowedly go to the theatre to have a " good laugh" or a " good cry . " That , as a great German critic has said , it is any part of the office of the drama " to purify by terror , " never enters the heads of feminine minds , which refuse 2 M 2

“The Masonic Magazine: 1877-04-01, Page 37” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 30 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01041877/page/37/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
"DYBOTS." Article 1
Untitled Article 2
Monthly Masonic Summary. Article 3
EXTRACTS FROM THE MINUTES OF THE ROYAL ARCH CHAPTER OF CONCORD ATTACHED TO THE ANCHOR AND HOPE LODGE, No. 37, BOLTON. Article 4
SONNET. Article 8
LETTER OF BRO. W. J. HUGHAN, OF ENGLAND, TO THE GRAND LODGE OF OHIO. Article 8
AN OLD, OLD STORY. Article 13
THREE CHARGES. Article 14
WONDERS OF OPERATIVE MASONRY. Article 14
ON FATHER FOY'S NOTES. Article 18
A TRIP TO DAI-BUTSU. Article 19
THE HAPPY HOUR. Article 21
NOTES ON THE OLD MINUTE BOOKS OF THE BRITISH UNION LODGE, No. 114, IPSWICH. A.D. 1762. Article 21
THE QUESTION OF THE COLOURED FREEMASONS IN THE UNITED STATES. Article 24
THE JEALOUS SCEPTIC. Article 25
THE LADY MURIEL. Article 27
THE MASSORAH. Article 29
THE BRIGHT SIDE. Article 32
HOPE. Article 33
ON THE EXCESSIVE INFLUENCE OF WOMEM. Article 34
Our Archaeological Corner. Article 39
FREEMASONRY IN FRANCE. Article 40
THE ORIGIN AND REFERENCES OF THE HERMESIAN SPURIOUS FREEMASONRY. Article 43
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE AND ART. Article 46
A MASONIC ENIGMA. Article 50
BORN IN MARCH. Article 50
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

On The Excessive Influence Of Womem.

"But of what consequence 1 Theres the rub . That inherent and ineradicable love of appearances , of which I have already spoken , and which causes a woman to prefer the look of things to the substance of them , steps in to settle the question . By

» consequence" she means visible power , influence , and consideration . She wishes her husband to be a considerable person . Would she rather that he was a member of Parliament , though of little parliamentary distinction , or a scientific man of

much true distinction , but little talked about and less rewarded ? Would she rather that he were an Under-Secretary of State or , in other words , a conspicuous upper clerk , or a poet—say , like Wordsworth or Shelley—the scorn of bis generation , though certain to be the delight of the next ? AVould she rather that her husband had written the ' Ode to the

Skylark' or were Lord Lieutenant of Ireland ? The question , alas ! requires no

answer . " Then see the consequence ! Women , through the excessive influence they now exercise , are perpetually assisting to lower the standard of the objects of life , and of the qualities which deserve admiration aud reward . Their practical dispositions tend

to banish all the nobler and less directly remunerative pursuits from existence , to circumscribe the sphere of man ' s energies , and to make him a vulgar athlete in a vulgar arena . Their natural instincts are all for the goodthe virtuousthe

, , domestic , but still the small . Their acquired social instincts are all for the magnificent but the mean , for the showy but the sordid . If you once get them to take an interest in a man ' s being something more than the exemplary bead

of a household , all they then want him to he is to be rich , conspicuous , and powerful . They are utterly indifferent to posthumous fame , and not much more concerned about contemporary fame , unless it happens to be synonymous with notoriety . They

would infinitely sooner that their husband ' s horse won the Derby than that he wrote ' Hamlet' or discovered Neptune . " It is not in the nature of things that the influence of women should have attained the proportion it has reached in our days without the consequences being mirrored m those three most faithful of reflectors ,

religious worship , literature , and the stage . Perhaps I tread on delicate ground , and show myself more of an old fogey than ever , when I express my distaste for those ecclesiastical fripperies which have of late years invaded the once plain ancl masculine ceremonies of the Anglican Church .

By a combination between women and certain ecclesiastical Epicenes , the vestments , the incense , the bowings and scrapings , the auricular confession , and the mystic dogmas of Papal worship are swarming around Reformed altarsandthanks to the

, , excessive influence of women , the church is being rapidly approximated to the theatre . " And in the theatre itself , what has the prevailing , the predominent influence of women done for us 1 It may be said that

it has purged the drama of coarse and offensive language , and , old fogey as I am , I cheerfully allow that it has had this excellent result . But whilst exrocising one devil it has let in a number of others , not so palpably objectionable , but more

subtly noxious . Our ears are no longer offended by foul language , but our eyes have seen , and still see , much that is scarcely calculated to edify , and which meets with no protest from women ; while our sense is insulted by paltry or sensational plays which our manly forefathers would have hissed off the boards . The heroic has

been driven from the stage , and the domestic and sentimental have usurped the ground it once proudly trod . The wars of kings , the clash of arms , the wrongs of a Lear , the tottering wickedness of a Macbeth , the jealous fury and tenderness of an Othello , the hearty laughter of a Falstaff , the incantations of witches and the frolics

of fairies , have been exchanged for the sorrows of a blacksmith , the peculations of a city clerk , the simpering of waitingmaids , the virtues of ticket-ofleave men , and the effete puns and horse-collar grins of inconsequent burlesques . The sentimental and the frivolous—these are truly

feminine states of mind—ancl the excessive influence of women has transferred them to the British theatre . People avowedly go to the theatre to have a " good laugh" or a " good cry . " That , as a great German critic has said , it is any part of the office of the drama " to purify by terror , " never enters the heads of feminine minds , which refuse 2 M 2

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