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  • May 1, 1874
  • Page 21
  • THE MYSTIC TIE.
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The Masonic Magazine, May 1, 1874: Page 21

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The Mystic Tie.

THE MYSTIC TIE .

Xcadbyflr . 0 . T . Corliss , at the Annivcrsavi / of Mystic Tic Lodge , No . 39 S , Nov . 24 , 1873 . ' All ties try which this universe is held , Are Mystic Ties , The atom ' s to its atom hound as well As earth to slues .

The waters in old ocean ' s bed are kept liy tliis same law , The hills rock-ribbed ami old as time have slept In silent awe . Ot Him who holds the ocean in His hand , The Mystic Tie , Buns through all nature e ' en to the utmost bound

Of sympathy . The soul that tenements in mortal clay , Was born to die , When it has tilled the measure of its day , The Mystic Tie , That erst-had bound it to this earthly sphere Is snapt in twain

, It reasserts its kindred to the sk y And lives again . AH tics are Mystic Ties . The human heart Throbs with delight AVhen joy surrounds it , or with inward smart When sorrows blight .

Around these altars , drawn by Mystic Ties , We fondly meet , Grasp the warm hand ; the warmer heart that lies Beneath , we greet . Within this mystic realm—the widow si ghs , Her hopes and fears Are g ; , rae . red up , —And -wiped from orphan ' s eyes

The scalding tears . Wide as the world our Order stands confessed , The corner-stone , Deep laid in charily and love it rests In every Zone . AVe come not here to-night as strangers come , This festal eve—Brings us as kindred'to a common home AVhere none deceive .

AA e eome to-night with music and with song , Come to rehearse Of Brotherhood and Craftsmen fresh and strong , In measured verse . The year has past , but leaves its types and forms , And at its close This Mystic Circle's still as fresh and warm

As when it rose . Tho Scpiare and Compass still tho rule and guide Of life appears . Tried by the Plumb and Level may we bide The coming years . And when the Grand Master of the Lodge above Shall summons all

To meet around the altar of llis love In that Grand Hall-May we as Craftsmen in the Mystic Tie Assemble there—Tried by the Plumb and Level , part no more Upon the Square .

Puzzles.

PUZZLES .

ISY into , JACOB XORTOH . That " the world is a puzzle , " is an old adage . Of all creation , man is tho only creature who endeavours to solve puzzles . The intelligent child delights in solving

riddles , or puzzles over some puzzling toy , or over a rebus in his book . The philosopher puzzles about tho laws that govern nature iu her various departments . The political economist puzzles over tho laws of trade and the science of government . The

historical critic puzzles how to eliminate truth from a mass of rubbish iu which former writers buried it . And the theologian puzzles about the red dragon with seven

heads m the Apocalypse , borne prove from it the destruction of tho world in the year eighteen hundred and something , while others with ecpial reason learnedly deduce therefrom , tint the last ten tribes of Israel have been transmogrified into Hottentots ,

American Indians , or the Anglo-Saxon race . And wo as Masons have also our puzzles to solve . Disraeli says , that eleven books are generally filled with lies , and the . twelfth tries to correct the eleven . When such

twelfth book appears , the adherents of the eleven—seriously known as Tories , Conser- - vatives , Old School , Orthodox , or Ultramontane — invariably raise a clamour against the poor twelfth , and he is assailed with such adjectives as infidelsceptic

, , porvertor , innovator , & c . . But if Disraeli ' s statement about one against eleven on ordinary subjects is correct , I think I may safely say , that in Masonry we have at least eleven multiplied by eleven who have written very absurdly to one who tries to

correct then- errors . And let mo here point out the advantage which the child has in its endeavour to puzzle out , say , a rebus , over his ciders in their puzzlings . Tho child , when it sets about its task , has nothing to unlearn , and as he is not the twelfth in his line of puzzling , he need not

fear of being rebuked by the learned with their usual adjectives ; but how is it with the man who happens to he the fortunate or unfortunate twelfth ? Let us look back at our so-called Masonic histories before "Bro . Findel's history appeared in an English garb , and let us also call to mind the abuse heaped upon him

“The Masonic Magazine: 1874-05-01, Page 21” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 9 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01051874/page/21/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
Monthly Masonic Summary. Article 1
THE INITIATION OF PRINCE ARTHUR INTO FREEMASONRY. Article 2
THE AREA ROUND ST. PAUL'S. Article 3
THE OLD MASONIC POEM. Article 3
BOOKSTORE PRIORY. Article 5
THE LIFE OF BRO. GEORGE OLIVER, D.D. Article 8
THE NEW MORALITY, 1874. Article 11
A COOL PROPOSAL. Article 12
ROYAL ARCH ADDRESS. Article 14
MODERN MEANINGS TO OLD WORDS. Article 17
ROMAN CATHOLICISM AND FREEMASONRY.—THE CHATHAM OUTRAGE. Article 17
THE MYSTIC TIE. Article 21
PUZZLES. Article 21
Reviews. Article 24
WEARING THE MASONIC EMBLEMS. Article 25
SYMBOL LANGUAGE. Article 26
FREEMASONRY AS A CONSERVATOR OF THE ARTS AND SCIENCES. Article 26
A SPEECH BY MARK TWAIN. Article 29
READING MASONS AT HOME AND ABROAD. Article 30
Our Archaeological Corner. Article 30
Questions and Answers. Article 31
Monthly Odds and Ends. Article 31
TOO GOOD TO BE LOST. Article 32
ADVICE . Article 32
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

The Mystic Tie.

THE MYSTIC TIE .

Xcadbyflr . 0 . T . Corliss , at the Annivcrsavi / of Mystic Tic Lodge , No . 39 S , Nov . 24 , 1873 . ' All ties try which this universe is held , Are Mystic Ties , The atom ' s to its atom hound as well As earth to slues .

The waters in old ocean ' s bed are kept liy tliis same law , The hills rock-ribbed ami old as time have slept In silent awe . Ot Him who holds the ocean in His hand , The Mystic Tie , Buns through all nature e ' en to the utmost bound

Of sympathy . The soul that tenements in mortal clay , Was born to die , When it has tilled the measure of its day , The Mystic Tie , That erst-had bound it to this earthly sphere Is snapt in twain

, It reasserts its kindred to the sk y And lives again . AH tics are Mystic Ties . The human heart Throbs with delight AVhen joy surrounds it , or with inward smart When sorrows blight .

Around these altars , drawn by Mystic Ties , We fondly meet , Grasp the warm hand ; the warmer heart that lies Beneath , we greet . Within this mystic realm—the widow si ghs , Her hopes and fears Are g ; , rae . red up , —And -wiped from orphan ' s eyes

The scalding tears . Wide as the world our Order stands confessed , The corner-stone , Deep laid in charily and love it rests In every Zone . AVe come not here to-night as strangers come , This festal eve—Brings us as kindred'to a common home AVhere none deceive .

AA e eome to-night with music and with song , Come to rehearse Of Brotherhood and Craftsmen fresh and strong , In measured verse . The year has past , but leaves its types and forms , And at its close This Mystic Circle's still as fresh and warm

As when it rose . Tho Scpiare and Compass still tho rule and guide Of life appears . Tried by the Plumb and Level may we bide The coming years . And when the Grand Master of the Lodge above Shall summons all

To meet around the altar of llis love In that Grand Hall-May we as Craftsmen in the Mystic Tie Assemble there—Tried by the Plumb and Level , part no more Upon the Square .

Puzzles.

PUZZLES .

ISY into , JACOB XORTOH . That " the world is a puzzle , " is an old adage . Of all creation , man is tho only creature who endeavours to solve puzzles . The intelligent child delights in solving

riddles , or puzzles over some puzzling toy , or over a rebus in his book . The philosopher puzzles about tho laws that govern nature iu her various departments . The political economist puzzles over tho laws of trade and the science of government . The

historical critic puzzles how to eliminate truth from a mass of rubbish iu which former writers buried it . And the theologian puzzles about the red dragon with seven

heads m the Apocalypse , borne prove from it the destruction of tho world in the year eighteen hundred and something , while others with ecpial reason learnedly deduce therefrom , tint the last ten tribes of Israel have been transmogrified into Hottentots ,

American Indians , or the Anglo-Saxon race . And wo as Masons have also our puzzles to solve . Disraeli says , that eleven books are generally filled with lies , and the . twelfth tries to correct the eleven . When such

twelfth book appears , the adherents of the eleven—seriously known as Tories , Conser- - vatives , Old School , Orthodox , or Ultramontane — invariably raise a clamour against the poor twelfth , and he is assailed with such adjectives as infidelsceptic

, , porvertor , innovator , & c . . But if Disraeli ' s statement about one against eleven on ordinary subjects is correct , I think I may safely say , that in Masonry we have at least eleven multiplied by eleven who have written very absurdly to one who tries to

correct then- errors . And let mo here point out the advantage which the child has in its endeavour to puzzle out , say , a rebus , over his ciders in their puzzlings . Tho child , when it sets about its task , has nothing to unlearn , and as he is not the twelfth in his line of puzzling , he need not

fear of being rebuked by the learned with their usual adjectives ; but how is it with the man who happens to he the fortunate or unfortunate twelfth ? Let us look back at our so-called Masonic histories before "Bro . Findel's history appeared in an English garb , and let us also call to mind the abuse heaped upon him

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