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  • The Masonic Magazine
  • July 1, 1876
  • Page 35
  • SPRING.
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The Masonic Magazine, July 1, 1876: Page 35

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    Article FAIRY TALES UTILISED FOR, THE NEW GENERATION. ← Page 4 of 4
    Article SPRING. Page 1 of 1
    Article SPRING. Page 1 of 1
    Article THE EDUCATION OF SOCIETY. Page 1 of 2 →
Page 35

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

Fairy Tales Utilised For, The New Generation.

chaos of conflicting doubts and struggles , and fears , and follies , andtrickery , and heartlessness , and baseness , which we often conp lacencallly "the world . " If any one thinks that my colours have been laid on too deeply , or are even too sombre in themselves ,

let them bear in mind that I am like the asp irant of old , seeking for the " temple of truth , " and that while I say all this and seek to limn with faithful brush a veritable p icture of all that lies before us , no one more fully admits than I dothat there are

, two sides to everything , and that , on the contrary , even the world ' s opinion is , in the long run ( though it often takes a long time forming ) , unfavourable to all that tends to weaken , to betray , to injure , to degrade humanity . Even "Puss in

Boots" will never find a niche in its " Walhalla , " and will be handed over to that reproving chorus of scorn and contempt which , like the avenging Eumenides of old , seems ever to accompany us all here poor mortals that we be , who play our little part ou the shifting stage of human life .

Spring.

SPRING .

BY MRS . a . M . TWEDDELL . Authoress of "Rhymes and Sketches to Illustrate the Cleveland Dialect , " etc . Fair Nature now is wide awake , And dons her robe of green ;

Flora her offerings now doth bring , To deck her beauteous queen . The birds rejoice to see her drest , And loud their matins sing , To give a greeting to her charms , And hail ihe hopeful Spring .

The Cuckoo now gives forth her note , And flies from tree to tree ; Cuckoo ! Cuckoo ! she blithely calls , And fills my heart with glee . My childhood ' s days come back again—She calls to mind the hours

When I with merry children Went forth to gather flowers . Again I wander by the brook , Or climb the moss-grown hill , And listen to the trickling Made by the mountain rill .

Spring.

My hat again is garlanded With wild flowers of the Spring ; I feel as joyous and as free As wild birds on the wing . The dream is o ' er , Cuckoo again

Recalls me from the past ; And all the golden days of youth That were too bri ght to last . But still her notes I love to hear , And still I love the flowers ; And still the Spring hath charms for me , To cheer life ' s evening hours . Rose Cottage , Stolcesley .

The Education Of Society.

THE EDUCATION OF SOCIETY .

As this paper of our contemporary , The World , has been reproduced in The Times we also think it well to call the attention of our readers to it here . The education of society should , it may well be thoughtbe thorough and complete .

, Yet , as a matter of fact , it remains pretty well where it has always been . The men and women of the great world neither know more nor less . A certain cant of superiority may vein the conversation of drawingrooms , and the cant of art is a sort of

fashionable epidemic during the exhibition of the Royal Academy ; but the basis of solid knowledge upon which that conversation rests has not become deeper or more solid with the supply of the countless new materials of its structure . It is not too much to say that with ninetv-nine men

out of a hundred no specific addition is made to the facts of what may be called their purely educational knowledge after they leave school or college . In other words , while they are graduating in the world ' s academy , they do nothing to increase that store of book wisdom of which

they may have gained possession when as yet in statu pwjoiKctri . Their views of literature and history remain to the end of their lives what those views were when they passed the last examination and answered the last question . If they have

travelled a good deal , they will have increased their knowledge of geography ; if they are unusually observant , they will have acquired some novel ideas on the subject of politics and government . To put it differently , they may amplify indefinitely

“The Masonic Magazine: 1876-07-01, Page 35” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 9 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01071876/page/35/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
TO OUR READERS. Article 2
INDEX. Article 4
Monthly Masonic Summary. Article 7
SONNET. Article 7
A PCEAN. Article 8
SOCIAL PROBLEMS AND THEIR PEACEFUL SOLUTION. Article 10
THE BROKEN TESSERA. Article 13
THE WOMEN OF OUR TIME. Article 14
A WORD FOR OUR BOYS. Article 17
SONNET. Article 19
TRIADS IN MASONRY. Article 19
NOTES ON THE OLD MINUTE BOOKS OF THE BRITISH UNION LODGE, No. 114, IPSWICH. A.D. 1762. Article 20
AN ITALIAN COUNT. Article 24
WHISTLE DOWN THE BRAKES. Article 28
ZOROASTRIANISM AND FREEMASONRY. Article 28
THE OLD FISHER'S TALE. Article 32
FAIRY TALES UTILISED FOR, THE NEW GENERATION. Article 32
SPRING. Article 35
THE EDUCATION OF SOCIETY. Article 35
THE ORIGIN AND REFERENCES OF THE HERMESIAN SPURIOUS FREEMASONRY. Article 37
Untitled Article 41
Our Archaeological Corner. Article 42
THE TROAD. Article 43
A STRICKEN HEART. Article 47
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE AND ART. Article 47
THE NEW SCHOOL DIRECTOR. Article 49
REVIEW. Article 50
MASONIC CYCLOPAEDIA. Article 54
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Page 35

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

Fairy Tales Utilised For, The New Generation.

chaos of conflicting doubts and struggles , and fears , and follies , andtrickery , and heartlessness , and baseness , which we often conp lacencallly "the world . " If any one thinks that my colours have been laid on too deeply , or are even too sombre in themselves ,

let them bear in mind that I am like the asp irant of old , seeking for the " temple of truth , " and that while I say all this and seek to limn with faithful brush a veritable p icture of all that lies before us , no one more fully admits than I dothat there are

, two sides to everything , and that , on the contrary , even the world ' s opinion is , in the long run ( though it often takes a long time forming ) , unfavourable to all that tends to weaken , to betray , to injure , to degrade humanity . Even "Puss in

Boots" will never find a niche in its " Walhalla , " and will be handed over to that reproving chorus of scorn and contempt which , like the avenging Eumenides of old , seems ever to accompany us all here poor mortals that we be , who play our little part ou the shifting stage of human life .

Spring.

SPRING .

BY MRS . a . M . TWEDDELL . Authoress of "Rhymes and Sketches to Illustrate the Cleveland Dialect , " etc . Fair Nature now is wide awake , And dons her robe of green ;

Flora her offerings now doth bring , To deck her beauteous queen . The birds rejoice to see her drest , And loud their matins sing , To give a greeting to her charms , And hail ihe hopeful Spring .

The Cuckoo now gives forth her note , And flies from tree to tree ; Cuckoo ! Cuckoo ! she blithely calls , And fills my heart with glee . My childhood ' s days come back again—She calls to mind the hours

When I with merry children Went forth to gather flowers . Again I wander by the brook , Or climb the moss-grown hill , And listen to the trickling Made by the mountain rill .

Spring.

My hat again is garlanded With wild flowers of the Spring ; I feel as joyous and as free As wild birds on the wing . The dream is o ' er , Cuckoo again

Recalls me from the past ; And all the golden days of youth That were too bri ght to last . But still her notes I love to hear , And still I love the flowers ; And still the Spring hath charms for me , To cheer life ' s evening hours . Rose Cottage , Stolcesley .

The Education Of Society.

THE EDUCATION OF SOCIETY .

As this paper of our contemporary , The World , has been reproduced in The Times we also think it well to call the attention of our readers to it here . The education of society should , it may well be thoughtbe thorough and complete .

, Yet , as a matter of fact , it remains pretty well where it has always been . The men and women of the great world neither know more nor less . A certain cant of superiority may vein the conversation of drawingrooms , and the cant of art is a sort of

fashionable epidemic during the exhibition of the Royal Academy ; but the basis of solid knowledge upon which that conversation rests has not become deeper or more solid with the supply of the countless new materials of its structure . It is not too much to say that with ninetv-nine men

out of a hundred no specific addition is made to the facts of what may be called their purely educational knowledge after they leave school or college . In other words , while they are graduating in the world ' s academy , they do nothing to increase that store of book wisdom of which

they may have gained possession when as yet in statu pwjoiKctri . Their views of literature and history remain to the end of their lives what those views were when they passed the last examination and answered the last question . If they have

travelled a good deal , they will have increased their knowledge of geography ; if they are unusually observant , they will have acquired some novel ideas on the subject of politics and government . To put it differently , they may amplify indefinitely

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