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  • Oct. 1, 1876
  • Page 50
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The Masonic Magazine, Oct. 1, 1876: Page 50

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    Article AN OLD, OLD STORY. ← Page 4 of 4
    Article AN OLD, OLD STORY. Page 4 of 4
    Article MASONIC SERMON. Page 1 of 4 →
Page 50

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

An Old, Old Story.

when Air . Mainwaring chimed in by observing— " He ' s a bustling little fellow ; but I do wish he'd be a little more independent . He does not seem to have an opinion of his own , and if you ask him a question , he never knows what to say . "

" Ah , " said the Colonel quickly ; " I'll tell you what , a little " straightening " would do him a deal of good . I can't bear to see our young men rambling about as they do , the idle chaps , positively with round shoulders . He wants ' setting up

drill' for a few clays , and I ' m even inclined to think he would profit by the ' goose step . '" Miss Margerison , who had become a little fidgety during these not altogether complimentary opinions of her model curate

, tried to change the conversation by asking Mr . Mainwaring if he would stop and dine with them . " 1 never , " she said , " turn the Colonel out without receiving him as he says himself , ' to bed and board , ' and as your residence is so close you have lenty

p of time to go and dress and return . " Miss Margerison was always very particular about people dressing for dinner , aud I thmk she was quite right . So much did

the Colonel know and regard his old friend ' s particularities , that whenever he came , as he often did , from his little London lodgings close to his club , to spend a clay in the country , his old soldier servant Johnson , who had been with him

many a long year , and had been in his old oompany from a boy , alwa } r s came with him , with his well-filled carpet-bag . And so that party broke up , the ladies returning slowly to the house , Air . Mainwaring getting into his outrigger which

lay chained to the steps , and the Colonel moving alone , sedate aud serene , erect and animated , humming his favourite melody , 1 ' Why , soldiers , why , " as he lit his cigar and took what he called " a constitutional " on the " quarter-deck" a little terrace

, which overhung the Thames . Now did I not tell yon at the first that my story would be very slow and very prosaic , and am 1 not right ? Oh ye classic and graceful maidens , who are for ever in ecstatic admiration and

awestruck emotion , at the sensational tales of the day , how dull , how dreary , how stale and flat and unprofitable , must this veracious chronicle appear to you 1

An Old, Old Story.

Why I hear Belinda crying out , " There is no excitement , nothing horrible ! I want my feelings harrowed up ; I long for some desperate villainy . I am utterl y tired of this humdrum life , and conventional habits . I like the weird , the

deplorable , the detestable , the very wicked !" Fair Belinda , charming as you reall y are , I do not agree with you . Put away , my clear girl , these monstrosities of modern sensational literature—at once . Cease to be " bizarre . " Do not think it clever to ape

being fast and knowing , or up to the vice and horrors of a debased society ; but remain your own gentler better , truer , self , and be what you really are and can be , the most charming and cultivated , the most refined and amiable , the most tender and beautiful

of beings . If this sensational literature goes ou much longer , we shall have all our girls marrying " tickets of leave , " and the only people who will get on in the world will be those who defy " Mrs . Grundy , " and transgress every law , human and Divine .

Masonic Sermon.

MASONIC SERMON .

Preached by Bro . Eev . CHARLES E TISDALL , D . D ., Chancellor of Christ Church Cathedral and rector of St . Dolough ' s , ou the Feast of the Nativity of St . John : — " ' He must increase , but I must decrease . " —St , John iii . SO . He said the nativity of St . John the

Baptist was commemorated that clay by the Church . From seclusion he came forth when the time had arrived for his showing unto Israel . Having from the very first given no pledges to society he owed it nothing but one thing , and that

was truth—the truth as he manfully gave it , regardless of the consequences as they might affect himself ; rebuking alike the naturally confident , the hypocritically formal , and the openly depraved . As his name signified , he was a gift from Jehovah

bestowed upon a people of whose moral condition of uufruitfuluess and degeneracy it might be said it was imaged by the wildness of tho scene chosen for the exercise of his ministry . Une of God's own heroes , he was a valiant soldier in the noble army of those whose blood had so often proved the

“The Masonic Magazine: 1876-10-01, Page 50” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 9 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01101876/page/50/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
Monthly Masonic Summary. Article 1
THE ORIGIN AND REFERENCES OF THE HERMESIAN SPURIOUS FREEMASONRY. Article 2
BESSIE GROVE: Article 4
A PCEAN. Article 7
ZOROASTRIANISM AND FREE MASONRY. Article 9
SOCIAL PROBLEMS AND THEIR PEACEFUL SOLUTION. Article 10
TO SAINT BRIDE'S CHURCH, DOUGLAS, LANARKSHIRE, N. B. Article 13
THE WOMEN OF OUR TIME. Article 14
FREEMASONRY.* Article 16
LONG LIVERS: Article 17
EXTRACTS FROM THE MINUTE BOOKS OF THE ROYAL ARCH CHAPTER OF PARADISE, No. 139, FREEMASONS' HALL, SHEFFIELD. Article 31
A SANG ABOUT THE BAIRNS. Article 34
LITTLE JACK RAG'S "DAY IN THE COUNTRY"." Article 35
EMBLEMS OF TIME. Article 39
CONTEMPORARY LETTERS ON THE FRENCH REVOLUTION Article 39
GERARD MONTAGU; Article 41
FAIRY TALES UTILISED FOR THE NEW GENERATION. Article 43
THOMAS TUSSER—A SONNET Article 45
CIVIL AND MECHANICAL ENGI NEER'S SOCIETY. Article 45
AN OLD, OLD STORY. Article 47
MASONIC SERMON. Article 50
SONNET. Article 54
TAKEN BY BEIGANDS Article 54
PARENTAL AFFECTION. Article 57
Our Archaeological Corner. Article 57
ADDRESS OF P.G.M. BRO. HONRICHARD VAUX, AT CENTENNIAL OF AMERICAN UNION LODGE. Article 58
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE AND ART. Article 60
THE FLOOD OF YEARS. Article 62
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Page 50

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

An Old, Old Story.

when Air . Mainwaring chimed in by observing— " He ' s a bustling little fellow ; but I do wish he'd be a little more independent . He does not seem to have an opinion of his own , and if you ask him a question , he never knows what to say . "

" Ah , " said the Colonel quickly ; " I'll tell you what , a little " straightening " would do him a deal of good . I can't bear to see our young men rambling about as they do , the idle chaps , positively with round shoulders . He wants ' setting up

drill' for a few clays , and I ' m even inclined to think he would profit by the ' goose step . '" Miss Margerison , who had become a little fidgety during these not altogether complimentary opinions of her model curate

, tried to change the conversation by asking Mr . Mainwaring if he would stop and dine with them . " 1 never , " she said , " turn the Colonel out without receiving him as he says himself , ' to bed and board , ' and as your residence is so close you have lenty

p of time to go and dress and return . " Miss Margerison was always very particular about people dressing for dinner , aud I thmk she was quite right . So much did

the Colonel know and regard his old friend ' s particularities , that whenever he came , as he often did , from his little London lodgings close to his club , to spend a clay in the country , his old soldier servant Johnson , who had been with him

many a long year , and had been in his old oompany from a boy , alwa } r s came with him , with his well-filled carpet-bag . And so that party broke up , the ladies returning slowly to the house , Air . Mainwaring getting into his outrigger which

lay chained to the steps , and the Colonel moving alone , sedate aud serene , erect and animated , humming his favourite melody , 1 ' Why , soldiers , why , " as he lit his cigar and took what he called " a constitutional " on the " quarter-deck" a little terrace

, which overhung the Thames . Now did I not tell yon at the first that my story would be very slow and very prosaic , and am 1 not right ? Oh ye classic and graceful maidens , who are for ever in ecstatic admiration and

awestruck emotion , at the sensational tales of the day , how dull , how dreary , how stale and flat and unprofitable , must this veracious chronicle appear to you 1

An Old, Old Story.

Why I hear Belinda crying out , " There is no excitement , nothing horrible ! I want my feelings harrowed up ; I long for some desperate villainy . I am utterl y tired of this humdrum life , and conventional habits . I like the weird , the

deplorable , the detestable , the very wicked !" Fair Belinda , charming as you reall y are , I do not agree with you . Put away , my clear girl , these monstrosities of modern sensational literature—at once . Cease to be " bizarre . " Do not think it clever to ape

being fast and knowing , or up to the vice and horrors of a debased society ; but remain your own gentler better , truer , self , and be what you really are and can be , the most charming and cultivated , the most refined and amiable , the most tender and beautiful

of beings . If this sensational literature goes ou much longer , we shall have all our girls marrying " tickets of leave , " and the only people who will get on in the world will be those who defy " Mrs . Grundy , " and transgress every law , human and Divine .

Masonic Sermon.

MASONIC SERMON .

Preached by Bro . Eev . CHARLES E TISDALL , D . D ., Chancellor of Christ Church Cathedral and rector of St . Dolough ' s , ou the Feast of the Nativity of St . John : — " ' He must increase , but I must decrease . " —St , John iii . SO . He said the nativity of St . John the

Baptist was commemorated that clay by the Church . From seclusion he came forth when the time had arrived for his showing unto Israel . Having from the very first given no pledges to society he owed it nothing but one thing , and that

was truth—the truth as he manfully gave it , regardless of the consequences as they might affect himself ; rebuking alike the naturally confident , the hypocritically formal , and the openly depraved . As his name signified , he was a gift from Jehovah

bestowed upon a people of whose moral condition of uufruitfuluess and degeneracy it might be said it was imaged by the wildness of tho scene chosen for the exercise of his ministry . Une of God's own heroes , he was a valiant soldier in the noble army of those whose blood had so often proved the

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