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  • The Masonic Magazine
  • Sept. 1, 1877
  • Page 6
  • THE DEATH OF ALEXANDER.
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The Masonic Magazine, Sept. 1, 1877: Page 6

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    Article OBJECTS, ADVANTAGES, AND PLEASURES OF SCIENCE. ← Page 5 of 5
    Article THE DEATH OF ALEXANDER. Page 1 of 1
Page 6

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

Objects, Advantages, And Pleasures Of Science.

without the hel p of glasses ; but all those moons move round them principal p lanets , as ours does round the Earth , in ovals oi ellipses ; while the planets , with their moons , move in their ovals round the Sun , like our own Earth with its moon . But this powerwhich draws them all

, towards the Sun , and regulates their path and their motion round him , and which draws the moons towards the priucijial planets , and regulates their motion and path round those planets , is the same with the gravity by which bodies fall towards

the earth , being attracted by it . Therefore , the whole of the heavenly bodies are kept in their places , and wheel round the Sun , by the same influence or power that makes a stone fall to the ground . It is usual to call the Sun , and the

jilanets which with their moons move round him , the Solar System ; because they are a class ot the heavenly bodies far apart from the innumerable Fixed Stars , and so near each other , as to exert a perceptible influence on one another , and thus to be connected together .

The Death Of Alexander.

THE DEATH OF ALEXANDER .

FAREWELL to the Hero , whose chivalrous name [ fame ; Bade the laud of his fathers rise highest in Farewell , Macedonia , to all that was dear ; Farewell to thy glory ' s unbroken career , The Triumphs of Emjiire have fled with a breath . [ death .

And the Day-star of Conquest is faded in With the soul that once gave thee command over all , With the arm that ivpheld thee , proud land , thou must fall ; For the spirit that warmed thee for ever

hath flown , [ stone . And left thee to weep o ' er his sepulchre ' s Time was that the lightning , which erst used to jilay From yon eyeball that glares with a powerless ray ,

Would have flashed through the din , and the tumult of fight , [ night . As the meteor gleams ' mid the darkness of Time was , that yon arm would have dealt out the blow [ of the foe ; With the thunderbolt ' s force on the helm

And Fancy might think , as the bloodreeking crest Of the King and the Warrior shone hi gh o ' er the rest , That the God of the battle was goading his car Through the ranks of the vanquishedthe

, tide of the war . Time was , —but those glories have long passed away , Like the breeze of the North o ' er the searuffled spray ; Like the rose-bud of Summer they died in

their bloom , And Memory pauses to weep o ' er their doom . Oh ! Fiend of Ambition , look clown on the shame That has darkened the ray of thy Votary ' s fame ;

And blush to confess that in yon low estate Lies the remnant of all that was mighty and great . And shook not the world , and its kingdoms with dread 1 And quail ' d not the sky as the parting life fled ?

And fell not the Hero where nations pursued , In the heat of the battle , the toil of the feud ! Did no prodigy herald the last dying pain , As his breath ebb'd away o ' er the millions of slain 1 Nowjoy to yeThebanswhose heart ' s

, , , blood bedew'd The desolate soil , where thine altars had stood ! Thou Genius of Persia 1 look down from thy throne , The battle is wonand the proud are

o'er-, thrown ; And the Spirit of Valour , the bosom of Fire , That grasjfd at the world in its headlong desire , Unworthy the fame of the Deified Brave , Has sunk like the dastard luxurious slave .

Weep , Macedou , weep ,, o ' er thine Hero ' s decay , Weep , Macedon ! slave of a foreigner's sway ; Give a tear and a frown to the page of thy story , That tells of the darkness that shrouded his glory ; And lament that his deeds were unable to

save The son of thy love from so lowly a grave , C . B .

“The Masonic Magazine: 1877-09-01, Page 6” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 31 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01091877/page/6/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
Monthly Masonic Summary. Article 1
SONNET. Article 1
OBJECTS, ADVANTAGES, AND PLEASURES OF SCIENCE. Article 2
THE DEATH OF ALEXANDER. Article 6
DEVONSHIRE LODGES PRIOR TO THE "UNION" OF DEC, 1813. Article 7
THE WORK OF NATURE IN THE MONTHS. Article 10
UPBRAID ME NOT. Article 13
THE ADVENTURES OF DON PASQUALE. Article 14
AN OLD-FASHIONED LOVE-SONG. Article 17
WHAT IS THE GOOD OF FREEMASONRY? Article 18
Architectural Jottings. Article 20
MY LORD THE KING; Article 22
ONLY A ROSE. Article 28
Our Archaeological Corner. Article 29
THE TRYST. Article 31
CONTEMPORARY LETTERS ON THE FRENCH REVOLUTION. Article 32
PROCLAMATION DU ROI, Article 32
ORDRE DE MARCHE. Article 33
PLAN, Article 34
Untitled Article 35
AFTER THE LAST POPULAR SCIENCE LECTURE. Article 36
TOM HOOD. Article 37
THE VISTA OF LIFE. Article 41
Forgotten Stories. Article 44
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE AND ART. Article 46
MR. SPRECHELHEIMER'S MISTAKE. Article 49
DOUBLE ACROSTIC. Article 49
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Objects, Advantages, And Pleasures Of Science.

without the hel p of glasses ; but all those moons move round them principal p lanets , as ours does round the Earth , in ovals oi ellipses ; while the planets , with their moons , move in their ovals round the Sun , like our own Earth with its moon . But this powerwhich draws them all

, towards the Sun , and regulates their path and their motion round him , and which draws the moons towards the priucijial planets , and regulates their motion and path round those planets , is the same with the gravity by which bodies fall towards

the earth , being attracted by it . Therefore , the whole of the heavenly bodies are kept in their places , and wheel round the Sun , by the same influence or power that makes a stone fall to the ground . It is usual to call the Sun , and the

jilanets which with their moons move round him , the Solar System ; because they are a class ot the heavenly bodies far apart from the innumerable Fixed Stars , and so near each other , as to exert a perceptible influence on one another , and thus to be connected together .

The Death Of Alexander.

THE DEATH OF ALEXANDER .

FAREWELL to the Hero , whose chivalrous name [ fame ; Bade the laud of his fathers rise highest in Farewell , Macedonia , to all that was dear ; Farewell to thy glory ' s unbroken career , The Triumphs of Emjiire have fled with a breath . [ death .

And the Day-star of Conquest is faded in With the soul that once gave thee command over all , With the arm that ivpheld thee , proud land , thou must fall ; For the spirit that warmed thee for ever

hath flown , [ stone . And left thee to weep o ' er his sepulchre ' s Time was that the lightning , which erst used to jilay From yon eyeball that glares with a powerless ray ,

Would have flashed through the din , and the tumult of fight , [ night . As the meteor gleams ' mid the darkness of Time was , that yon arm would have dealt out the blow [ of the foe ; With the thunderbolt ' s force on the helm

And Fancy might think , as the bloodreeking crest Of the King and the Warrior shone hi gh o ' er the rest , That the God of the battle was goading his car Through the ranks of the vanquishedthe

, tide of the war . Time was , —but those glories have long passed away , Like the breeze of the North o ' er the searuffled spray ; Like the rose-bud of Summer they died in

their bloom , And Memory pauses to weep o ' er their doom . Oh ! Fiend of Ambition , look clown on the shame That has darkened the ray of thy Votary ' s fame ;

And blush to confess that in yon low estate Lies the remnant of all that was mighty and great . And shook not the world , and its kingdoms with dread 1 And quail ' d not the sky as the parting life fled ?

And fell not the Hero where nations pursued , In the heat of the battle , the toil of the feud ! Did no prodigy herald the last dying pain , As his breath ebb'd away o ' er the millions of slain 1 Nowjoy to yeThebanswhose heart ' s

, , , blood bedew'd The desolate soil , where thine altars had stood ! Thou Genius of Persia 1 look down from thy throne , The battle is wonand the proud are

o'er-, thrown ; And the Spirit of Valour , the bosom of Fire , That grasjfd at the world in its headlong desire , Unworthy the fame of the Deified Brave , Has sunk like the dastard luxurious slave .

Weep , Macedou , weep ,, o ' er thine Hero ' s decay , Weep , Macedon ! slave of a foreigner's sway ; Give a tear and a frown to the page of thy story , That tells of the darkness that shrouded his glory ; And lament that his deeds were unable to

save The son of thy love from so lowly a grave , C . B .

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