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  • Oct. 1, 1880
  • Page 24
  • DERWENTWATER.
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The Masonic Magazine, Oct. 1, 1880: Page 24

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Page 24

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

Derwentwater.

to poAvdcr , but that great educator , time , has made the tourist as much in love Avith tbe mountains as with the lakes , and he sees in them a beauty and a charm Avithout which the lakes themselves would be insipid . The groAvinonumbers of tourists testif y to the increasing good taste ancl oppulence of the people , and without any disparagement to any other of the lakes , each of ivhich has some peculiar charm , it is all but universally admitted by artists and men of cultivated taste that Derwentwater is the queen of the English lakes .

Derwentwater.

DERWENTWATER .

AUGUST , 1880 . "IT 7 HEN standing on thy wooded side to-day , ' ' 'Mid summer ' s golden hours aud glowing sheen , Upon those pleasant hills each glancing ray Serves to bring out that mingled grey and green

Which throw a tint of soft and gentle grace On all I see , on all I gaze on now , Whether I watch the lake ' s all placid face , Whether I scan each mountain ' s stately brow .

Bright spot ! Admiringly I linger still Ancl lovingly , amid fond nature ' s bounteous dower , Alike in leafy wood , in babbling rill , In the dark clouds and in the fragrant hour ; Ancl all I see around and greet again Seem to bo speaking in a key to me In solemn chords in soft ancl silvery strain Of gracious , loving , mystic harmony .

The voice of men is hushed , life ' s cares are gone ; In this great world of wonder and of praise I ' m lost ; and , full contented , one by one I pass in grateful thoughts these waning clays . When nature once more claims ns for her own , Like children , awe-struck , sitting at her feet ; In such a scene no mortal need be lone

, For "Wisdom , Strength , and Beaut y" here we meet And thus the mind is raised from passing things , From painted bubbles and from fragile toys , To find , as Time its lengthening shadow flings , Peace in great Wisdom ' s Avays and Nature ' s j

oys . Nothing is here but kindly calm aud rest , Divinest grace below , around , above ; And as the sun is sinking in the west I learn to praise , to wonder , and to love .

“The Masonic Magazine: 1880-10-01, Page 24” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 23 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01101880/page/24/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
MASONIC MUSINGS. Article 1
THE ROSE CROIX. Article 3
EARLY CHRISTIAN ARCHITECTURE IN IRELAND.* Article 4
LIGHT. Article 8
AFTER ALL, OR THRICE WON. Article 9
DERWENTWATER. Article 20
DERWENTWATER. Article 24
THE TESSERA HOSPITALIS. Article 25
SAVED: A TALE OF THE FRENCH REVOLUTION. Article 27
OLD RECORDS OF THE LODGE OF PEEBLES. Article 29
THE SUPPRESSION OF THE TEMPLARS IN ENGLAND. Article 32
LITERARY AND ANTIQUARIAN GOSSIP. Article 35
LADIES' DRESS. Article 38
A CHERISHED NOTION. Article 40
THE ANCIENT MYSTERIES. Article 41
LEGEND OF STRASBURG CATHEDRAL. Article 44
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Page 24

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

Derwentwater.

to poAvdcr , but that great educator , time , has made the tourist as much in love Avith tbe mountains as with the lakes , and he sees in them a beauty and a charm Avithout which the lakes themselves would be insipid . The groAvinonumbers of tourists testif y to the increasing good taste ancl oppulence of the people , and without any disparagement to any other of the lakes , each of ivhich has some peculiar charm , it is all but universally admitted by artists and men of cultivated taste that Derwentwater is the queen of the English lakes .

Derwentwater.

DERWENTWATER .

AUGUST , 1880 . "IT 7 HEN standing on thy wooded side to-day , ' ' 'Mid summer ' s golden hours aud glowing sheen , Upon those pleasant hills each glancing ray Serves to bring out that mingled grey and green

Which throw a tint of soft and gentle grace On all I see , on all I gaze on now , Whether I watch the lake ' s all placid face , Whether I scan each mountain ' s stately brow .

Bright spot ! Admiringly I linger still Ancl lovingly , amid fond nature ' s bounteous dower , Alike in leafy wood , in babbling rill , In the dark clouds and in the fragrant hour ; Ancl all I see around and greet again Seem to bo speaking in a key to me In solemn chords in soft ancl silvery strain Of gracious , loving , mystic harmony .

The voice of men is hushed , life ' s cares are gone ; In this great world of wonder and of praise I ' m lost ; and , full contented , one by one I pass in grateful thoughts these waning clays . When nature once more claims ns for her own , Like children , awe-struck , sitting at her feet ; In such a scene no mortal need be lone

, For "Wisdom , Strength , and Beaut y" here we meet And thus the mind is raised from passing things , From painted bubbles and from fragile toys , To find , as Time its lengthening shadow flings , Peace in great Wisdom ' s Avays and Nature ' s j

oys . Nothing is here but kindly calm aud rest , Divinest grace below , around , above ; And as the sun is sinking in the west I learn to praise , to wonder , and to love .

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