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  • Jan. 1, 1857
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, Jan. 1, 1857: Page 2

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    Article THE NEW YEAR. Page 1 of 4 →
Page 2

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

The New Year.

THE NEW YEAR .

Usually the commencement of each new epoch is regarded as sucli a natural occurrence as to excite but little , even the most imaginative , in this dull prosaic generation . Amongst our forefathers , the anticipation of Christmas produced an eager joyfulness , as the

thought of shaking off dull care and allowing the heart to heat with other impulses than mere money-getting came upon them . This revival also , this time of refreshment for the affections , at as augmented by the religious tone given to the festivities of the period , and men felt that devotion sanctioned the hilarity which the

disposition towards delight promoted . Now Christmas and the New Tear have become , indeed , oases very circumscribed in their influence over the rest of time . At the railway speed of our present progression in the lust for gold and the toadyism of power , men hardly pause to bait their hearts at these ancient hostelries of

goodwill . It is true , boys and girls make us live our time over again , and renew the saltness of our youth by their own pickledom of mischief ; we , old hypocritical mummies as we are , stretch our wizened jdtos , rugged by thought and pursed up with pecuniary calculation , into a ghastly grin of hollow sympathy with the boisterous

uproar of hearty fun sounded by the youngsters . But we soon return to our knitted brow , and cold calculating gaze , for the Exchange principle must be maintained — " business must be attended to ; " so we vote boys and girls great plagues , very expensive , sigh over our debts , begrudge almost the plums in the pudding , and the brief sunbeam of Christmas festivity , and the auspices of an opening year merge in the gloom of Paterfamilias moodily contesting the odd halfpenny in his butcher ' s bills ! Nevertheless , the journalist must not neglect his prescribed duty of casting up both sides of the account , with a view of meeting the Vol . hi . n

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1857-01-01, Page 2” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 29 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/frm_01011857/page/2/.
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Title Category Page
Untitled Ad 1
THE NEW YEAR. Article 2
PENCILLINGS PROM THE SKETCH-BOOK OF A MADRAS OFFICER. Article 6
LA VENDEE. Article 12
"LABOUR AND REFRESHMENT." Article 14
A SECOND CANTO FOR THE NEW TEAR. Article 16
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 17
ROYAL FREEMASONS' SCHOOL FOR FEMALE CHILDREN Article 19
GRAND MASTERS. Article 19
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 20
METROPOLITAN. Article 28
PROVINCIAL, Article 42
ROYAL ARCH. Article 62
KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. Article 63
SCOTLAND. Article 64
IRELAND. Article 70
AMERICA. Article 71
SUMMARY OF NEWS FOR DECEMBER Article 72
NOTICE. Article 76
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 76
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

The New Year.

THE NEW YEAR .

Usually the commencement of each new epoch is regarded as sucli a natural occurrence as to excite but little , even the most imaginative , in this dull prosaic generation . Amongst our forefathers , the anticipation of Christmas produced an eager joyfulness , as the

thought of shaking off dull care and allowing the heart to heat with other impulses than mere money-getting came upon them . This revival also , this time of refreshment for the affections , at as augmented by the religious tone given to the festivities of the period , and men felt that devotion sanctioned the hilarity which the

disposition towards delight promoted . Now Christmas and the New Tear have become , indeed , oases very circumscribed in their influence over the rest of time . At the railway speed of our present progression in the lust for gold and the toadyism of power , men hardly pause to bait their hearts at these ancient hostelries of

goodwill . It is true , boys and girls make us live our time over again , and renew the saltness of our youth by their own pickledom of mischief ; we , old hypocritical mummies as we are , stretch our wizened jdtos , rugged by thought and pursed up with pecuniary calculation , into a ghastly grin of hollow sympathy with the boisterous

uproar of hearty fun sounded by the youngsters . But we soon return to our knitted brow , and cold calculating gaze , for the Exchange principle must be maintained — " business must be attended to ; " so we vote boys and girls great plagues , very expensive , sigh over our debts , begrudge almost the plums in the pudding , and the brief sunbeam of Christmas festivity , and the auspices of an opening year merge in the gloom of Paterfamilias moodily contesting the odd halfpenny in his butcher ' s bills ! Nevertheless , the journalist must not neglect his prescribed duty of casting up both sides of the account , with a view of meeting the Vol . hi . n

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