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  • April 1, 1878
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The Masonic Magazine, April 1, 1878: Page 30

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Page 30

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

"Vale Pontifex Maxime!"

"VALE PONTIFEX MAXIME !"

THE ENTOMBMENT OF PIUS IX . WE have thought itAvell to take this interesting account of the funeral of a deceased Pope , ancl the election of a living one , from our excellent contemporary The Graphic . " The arching dome of Michael Angolo , almost a lesser sky Avithin the sky , rises dim and

shadoAvy above tho basilica dedicated to the Galilean Fisherman . The great , grim mosaics Avaver in the uncertain flicker of torches ; and the huge letters of the inscription show fitfull y , like the Avriting on the wall at Belshazzar s Feast . " Tu es Petrus , et super heme petram eedificavi Ecclesiam meam . " The letters come and go , one by one , fragmentarily . They are no longer the clear black Roman characters . They aro hieroglyphs full of a hidden ancl mysterious meaning . Within the Chapel of the Holy Sacrament , to the right of one entering St . Peter ' s by the groat door , lights have been burning aE day , and a still form , guarded by stiE forms , —the only restful figures in the vast thronged edifice , —has been lying Avith a smile on its Avaxen face . There it has

lain all day , and for four days and nights ; smiling quietly , as though the Angel of Death had AA'hispered a secret iu its ear , Avhich made earth poor and small as an infant ' s toy . It wears a deep crimson regal mantle , and a mitre covered AA'ith cloth of gold ; ancl gloves of crimson silk clothe the aged hands AA'hich clasp a small black cross , on AA'hich a silver Christ hangs sorroAvful and compassionate . On one finger of the crimson-gloved bauds glitters the episcopal ring . It has been there for four days in solemn pomp and state , surrounded by guardsto keep the multitudes pouring onpouring on

, away eager , , like an exhaustless sea . And still that secret Avhisper of the Angel of Death keeps the Avaxen face smiling . Under those closed lids there are visions that Ave cannot see . Within those dulled ears are sounds that Ave cannot hear . Let AVIIO AA'EI pause before that venerable shape in reverence or derision , it AVEI not quiver , it AVEI not throb . It remembers the secret whisper , ancl smiles quietly Avith an impregnable calm , to Avhich the mightiest monuments of time-defying Egypt are but handfuls of changing dust .

. But UOAV the struggle and the throng are past . The great doors have shut out from tho church the busy world , even as those closed eyelids shut it out for ever on the seventh day of this mouth . The l ying-in-state of Pius the Ninth , Pope of Rome , is over . Thousands have come to gaze upon the SIIOAV . Thousands of footsteps have shuffled OA'er the marble pavements , and out again on to the great steps , and across the Piazza , AA'here the soulless fountains ceaselessl ire to fall againand lash indifferent

y asp , p to sunny rainbow or dull thunder-cloud , and so into the streets Avhere the full life of the City absorbs them in its ftoAV . Quiet , —ah awful quiet , —reigns in St . Peter ' s . Think of the vast building , silent , save for an occasional sound of stealthy voice or foot!—a sound which flutters in shuddering echoes to the dome , and breaks its wings and dies there . Think of the vast building , dark save for some points of yell AV flame Avithin

the Chapel of the Sacrament , and a glare of tapers in the opposite chapel , Avhose light falls from its open door upon the dim pavement of the aisle , and the redder flare of a feAV torches shedding ghostly shadoAvs on marble column and linage , gilded altars , and the colossal bronze baldcquin above St . Peter ' s tomb . Strange to think of , —is it not ? —that the bronze of those tAvisted columns once lined the dome of the Pantheon ! And IIOAV Avithin that Avhilom pagan temple , divided from us by the HOAV of yelloAV Tiber ,

lies another king ancl ruler of men but recently called to his rest . Him , too , have tho thronging thousands flocked to gaze upon in his last repose , and him , too , have they found and left impassable , deaf to the blare of his loved soldier ' s bugle , smiling—he also—in the calm contentment of that last Avhisper , "Miserere , Domine 1 " That is the sigh of the living Avhen the pageant is over , and the great gates are shut , and the dazzling tapers spent . " Miserere nobis I"

“The Masonic Magazine: 1878-04-01, Page 30” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 9 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01041878/page/30/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
IMPORTANT CIRCULAR. Article 1
Untitled Article 2
SONNET. Article 3
AN HERMETIC WORK. Article 4
EARLY FREEMASONRY IN IRELAND. Article 7
THE CHAMBER OF IMAGERY. Article 10
THE ADVENTURES OF DON PASQUALE. Article 11
PAPERS ON THE GREAT PYRAMID. Article 13
In Memoriam. Article 17
THE WORK OF NATURE IN THE MONTHS. Article 18
FROM IDEALITY TO NATURE. Article 24
THE TRUE MASON. Article 25
AMABEL VAUGHAN. Article 26
"VALE PONTIFEX MAXIME!" Article 30
JILTED. Article 34
ON THE TESTING AND STRENGTH OF RAILWAY MATERIALS, &c. Article 35
MORITZ GRAF VON STRACHWITZ. Article 40
STANZAS. Article 41
LEBENSANSICHT. Article 42
A SONNET. Article 43
DU GEHEST DAHIN. Article 43
A PRAHLEREI. Article 43
I WOULD I WERE A POET. Article 44
GERMANIA. Article 44
THE TRUE HISTORY OF FREEMASONRY IN ENGLAND. Article 45
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART. Article 47
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

"Vale Pontifex Maxime!"

"VALE PONTIFEX MAXIME !"

THE ENTOMBMENT OF PIUS IX . WE have thought itAvell to take this interesting account of the funeral of a deceased Pope , ancl the election of a living one , from our excellent contemporary The Graphic . " The arching dome of Michael Angolo , almost a lesser sky Avithin the sky , rises dim and

shadoAvy above tho basilica dedicated to the Galilean Fisherman . The great , grim mosaics Avaver in the uncertain flicker of torches ; and the huge letters of the inscription show fitfull y , like the Avriting on the wall at Belshazzar s Feast . " Tu es Petrus , et super heme petram eedificavi Ecclesiam meam . " The letters come and go , one by one , fragmentarily . They are no longer the clear black Roman characters . They aro hieroglyphs full of a hidden ancl mysterious meaning . Within the Chapel of the Holy Sacrament , to the right of one entering St . Peter ' s by the groat door , lights have been burning aE day , and a still form , guarded by stiE forms , —the only restful figures in the vast thronged edifice , —has been lying Avith a smile on its Avaxen face . There it has

lain all day , and for four days and nights ; smiling quietly , as though the Angel of Death had AA'hispered a secret iu its ear , Avhich made earth poor and small as an infant ' s toy . It wears a deep crimson regal mantle , and a mitre covered AA'ith cloth of gold ; ancl gloves of crimson silk clothe the aged hands AA'hich clasp a small black cross , on AA'hich a silver Christ hangs sorroAvful and compassionate . On one finger of the crimson-gloved bauds glitters the episcopal ring . It has been there for four days in solemn pomp and state , surrounded by guardsto keep the multitudes pouring onpouring on

, away eager , , like an exhaustless sea . And still that secret Avhisper of the Angel of Death keeps the Avaxen face smiling . Under those closed lids there are visions that Ave cannot see . Within those dulled ears are sounds that Ave cannot hear . Let AVIIO AA'EI pause before that venerable shape in reverence or derision , it AVEI not quiver , it AVEI not throb . It remembers the secret whisper , ancl smiles quietly Avith an impregnable calm , to Avhich the mightiest monuments of time-defying Egypt are but handfuls of changing dust .

. But UOAV the struggle and the throng are past . The great doors have shut out from tho church the busy world , even as those closed eyelids shut it out for ever on the seventh day of this mouth . The l ying-in-state of Pius the Ninth , Pope of Rome , is over . Thousands have come to gaze upon the SIIOAV . Thousands of footsteps have shuffled OA'er the marble pavements , and out again on to the great steps , and across the Piazza , AA'here the soulless fountains ceaselessl ire to fall againand lash indifferent

y asp , p to sunny rainbow or dull thunder-cloud , and so into the streets Avhere the full life of the City absorbs them in its ftoAV . Quiet , —ah awful quiet , —reigns in St . Peter ' s . Think of the vast building , silent , save for an occasional sound of stealthy voice or foot!—a sound which flutters in shuddering echoes to the dome , and breaks its wings and dies there . Think of the vast building , dark save for some points of yell AV flame Avithin

the Chapel of the Sacrament , and a glare of tapers in the opposite chapel , Avhose light falls from its open door upon the dim pavement of the aisle , and the redder flare of a feAV torches shedding ghostly shadoAvs on marble column and linage , gilded altars , and the colossal bronze baldcquin above St . Peter ' s tomb . Strange to think of , —is it not ? —that the bronze of those tAvisted columns once lined the dome of the Pantheon ! And IIOAV Avithin that Avhilom pagan temple , divided from us by the HOAV of yelloAV Tiber ,

lies another king ancl ruler of men but recently called to his rest . Him , too , have tho thronging thousands flocked to gaze upon in his last repose , and him , too , have they found and left impassable , deaf to the blare of his loved soldier ' s bugle , smiling—he also—in the calm contentment of that last Avhisper , "Miserere , Domine 1 " That is the sigh of the living Avhen the pageant is over , and the great gates are shut , and the dazzling tapers spent . " Miserere nobis I"

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