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  • The Masonic Magazine
  • June 1, 1874
  • Page 32
  • LECTURE BY BRO. EMRA HOLMES ON " TOM HOOD."
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The Masonic Magazine, June 1, 1874: Page 32

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    Article THE FOOTSTEPS OF DECAY. Page 1 of 1
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Lecture By Bro. Emra Holmes On " Tom Hood."

married , and to many eminent Avriters , including Charles Lamb , Barry Cornwall , & c . " Faithless Sally Brown , " one of the most . humorous of Hood's poems , was read by the lecturer , as well as graver selections , including " To a sleeping child . " As a

descriptive poem he gave "The Eomance of Cologne , " styling it as perhaps as effective a piece of versification as anything of the kind in the English language . Conjointly with Mr . Eeynolds , Hood wrote and published anonymously " Odes

and addresses to great people , " which had a great sale , and occasioned no little wonder as to the author . On the 5 th May , 1824 , Hood married Miss Eeynolds , a woman of cultivated mind and literary tastes , and well suited to him as a companion . His poem , " I love thee , " was written at this time . Mr . Holmes read extracts from

Hood ' s letters to his wife to prove that all through their wedded life he was her lover as much as her husband , and said that it would be well if the same could be said of all great literary men Then first child scarcely survived its birth . Amongst some old papers a few tiny curls of golden

hah as soft as'the finest silk , were found wrapped in a yellow aud time / worn paper , on which was inscribed iu Hood ' s handwriting—Little eyes ttudt scarce did see , Little lips that never smiled ; Alas ! my little dear dead child , Death is thy father , and not me , I but embraced thee , soon as he .

On this occasion those exquisite lines of Charles Lamb ' s , " On an infant dying as soon as born , " were written aud sent to Hood . It was to be regretted that there was no record left of the pleasant clays of this intimacy with Charles Lamb and his sister . Bro . Holmesduring the rest of

, his capital lecture ( which we regret we cannot deal with at greater length ) , read further illustrations from Hood , amongst them being " The haunted house , " Sonnet to his wife , " The bridge of si ghs , " " The song of the shirt , " & c . The lecture was

listened to with rivetted attention , as it well deserved to be , for it abounded with interest from its opening line to its closing sentence , and proved to a demonstration , not alone that Bro . Holmes has studied Hood ' s life most faithfully , but has the ability to make others benefit by his labours .- —Adapted from Ipswich Newt .

The Footsteps Of Decay.

THE FOOTSTEPS OF DECAY .

The following is a translation from an ancient Spanish poem , which , says the Edinburgh' Revieno , is surpassed by nothing which we are acquainted with in the Spanish language , except the "Ode of Louis de Leon : "—¦

0 , let the soul its slumbers break—Arouse its senses and awake To see how soon Life , in its glories , glides away And the stern footsteps of decay-Come stealing on . And while we view the rolling tide

, Down which our flowing minutes glide Away so fast , Let us the present hour employ , And deem each future dream a joy Already past . Let no vain hope deceive the mind , No happier let us hope to find

To-morrow than to-day ; Our golden dreams of yore were bright , Like them the present shall delight—Like them decay .

Our lives like hastening streams must be , That into one engulfing sea Are doomed to fall—The sea of death whose waves roll on O'er king and kingdom , crown and throne , And swallow all . Alike the river's lordly tide ,

Alike the humble rivulets glide , To that sad wave ! Death levels poverty and pride ; The rich and poor sleep side by side Within the grave . Our birth is but a starting place ; Life is the running of the race ,

And death the goal ; There all our glittering toys are brought—That path alone of all unsought , Is found of all .

See , then , how poor and little worth Are all those glittering toys of earth ¦ That lure us here ; Dreams of a sleep that death must break , Alas ! before it bids us wake , AVe disappear . Long ere the damp of earth can bliht

g , The cheek ' s pure glow of red and white Has passed away ; Youth smiled , and all was heavenly fair—Age came and lay his linger there—And where are they ? Where is strength that spurned decay , The step that roved so light and gay ,

The heart's blithe tone ? The strength is gone , the step is slow , And joy grows wearisome , and woe ! When age comes on !

“The Masonic Magazine: 1874-06-01, Page 32” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 25 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01061874/page/32/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
Monthly Masonic Summary. Article 1
OUR GRAND MASTER. Article 2
THE OLD MASONIC POEM. Article 3
BYE-LAWS OF MILLTARY LODGES. Article 4
THE NEW MORALITY, 1874. Article 6
ROOKSTONE PRIORY. Article 7
THE HISTORY OF FREEMASONRY IN RUSSIA. Article 12
SERMON BY THE REV. H. W. KEMP, B.A., P.P.G.O., Article 14
THE OLD TILER. Article 16
SYMBOLISMS OF THE APRON. Article 16
THE MASON'S WIFE. Article 17
OUR LATE BRO. WM. CARPENTER. Article 17
UNDER THE TRAIN. Article 19
AN APRIL SERMON. Article 22
LANGUAGE. Article 22
ST. VINCENT. Article 24
WELCOMBE HILLS, STRATFORD-ON-AVON. Article 27
TROY. Article 27
LECTURE BY BRO. EMRA HOLMES ON " TOM HOOD." Article 31
THE FOOTSTEPS OF DECAY. Article 32
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Lecture By Bro. Emra Holmes On " Tom Hood."

married , and to many eminent Avriters , including Charles Lamb , Barry Cornwall , & c . " Faithless Sally Brown , " one of the most . humorous of Hood's poems , was read by the lecturer , as well as graver selections , including " To a sleeping child . " As a

descriptive poem he gave "The Eomance of Cologne , " styling it as perhaps as effective a piece of versification as anything of the kind in the English language . Conjointly with Mr . Eeynolds , Hood wrote and published anonymously " Odes

and addresses to great people , " which had a great sale , and occasioned no little wonder as to the author . On the 5 th May , 1824 , Hood married Miss Eeynolds , a woman of cultivated mind and literary tastes , and well suited to him as a companion . His poem , " I love thee , " was written at this time . Mr . Holmes read extracts from

Hood ' s letters to his wife to prove that all through their wedded life he was her lover as much as her husband , and said that it would be well if the same could be said of all great literary men Then first child scarcely survived its birth . Amongst some old papers a few tiny curls of golden

hah as soft as'the finest silk , were found wrapped in a yellow aud time / worn paper , on which was inscribed iu Hood ' s handwriting—Little eyes ttudt scarce did see , Little lips that never smiled ; Alas ! my little dear dead child , Death is thy father , and not me , I but embraced thee , soon as he .

On this occasion those exquisite lines of Charles Lamb ' s , " On an infant dying as soon as born , " were written aud sent to Hood . It was to be regretted that there was no record left of the pleasant clays of this intimacy with Charles Lamb and his sister . Bro . Holmesduring the rest of

, his capital lecture ( which we regret we cannot deal with at greater length ) , read further illustrations from Hood , amongst them being " The haunted house , " Sonnet to his wife , " The bridge of si ghs , " " The song of the shirt , " & c . The lecture was

listened to with rivetted attention , as it well deserved to be , for it abounded with interest from its opening line to its closing sentence , and proved to a demonstration , not alone that Bro . Holmes has studied Hood ' s life most faithfully , but has the ability to make others benefit by his labours .- —Adapted from Ipswich Newt .

The Footsteps Of Decay.

THE FOOTSTEPS OF DECAY .

The following is a translation from an ancient Spanish poem , which , says the Edinburgh' Revieno , is surpassed by nothing which we are acquainted with in the Spanish language , except the "Ode of Louis de Leon : "—¦

0 , let the soul its slumbers break—Arouse its senses and awake To see how soon Life , in its glories , glides away And the stern footsteps of decay-Come stealing on . And while we view the rolling tide

, Down which our flowing minutes glide Away so fast , Let us the present hour employ , And deem each future dream a joy Already past . Let no vain hope deceive the mind , No happier let us hope to find

To-morrow than to-day ; Our golden dreams of yore were bright , Like them the present shall delight—Like them decay .

Our lives like hastening streams must be , That into one engulfing sea Are doomed to fall—The sea of death whose waves roll on O'er king and kingdom , crown and throne , And swallow all . Alike the river's lordly tide ,

Alike the humble rivulets glide , To that sad wave ! Death levels poverty and pride ; The rich and poor sleep side by side Within the grave . Our birth is but a starting place ; Life is the running of the race ,

And death the goal ; There all our glittering toys are brought—That path alone of all unsought , Is found of all .

See , then , how poor and little worth Are all those glittering toys of earth ¦ That lure us here ; Dreams of a sleep that death must break , Alas ! before it bids us wake , AVe disappear . Long ere the damp of earth can bliht

g , The cheek ' s pure glow of red and white Has passed away ; Youth smiled , and all was heavenly fair—Age came and lay his linger there—And where are they ? Where is strength that spurned decay , The step that roved so light and gay ,

The heart's blithe tone ? The strength is gone , the step is slow , And joy grows wearisome , and woe ! When age comes on !

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