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  • The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine
  • June 1, 1856
  • Page 14
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, June 1, 1856: Page 14

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Page 14

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

Untitled Article

we shall be rightly served if it obtains us a kick . Now , if in private it is not yet thbught quite doing the glorious thing to entrap your neighbour ., or to divert , with dexterous sleight of hand , the bread from his mouth ( like some penny or five-pound conjurer ) , whilst you deposit in it only the wrong end of your walking-stick ; surely , in

your public capacity , and when you are trusted as a servant of the nation , so sworn , over and over again , to guard its interests , it is something next to guilt—if it be not guilt itself—to shuffle , and job , and cut , villanously , and contrive , until all your patronage has been sifted into a great basin of gold just to put away in your own private corner-cupboard . We speak to the public

Catilines!—sellers of their country . But there are others , we think , sometimes more dangerous and intolerable , who sit so snugly and hug each other on that long bench of public patronage . Fools abound—incapables—great talkers and little doers—unwieldy Gogs and Magogs of conceit , with their large foolish heads wagging from side to side , winking with an air of wondrous wisdom ;—men

with an exaggerated osfrontis , on which is written all the cleverness of Parliament , but with a walnut of a heart;—big with the little , little with the big , placing their gripe upon the coat-skirt of any one before them , whose gift it is to lift them yet higher up the ladder of public advantage , or , Mawworm-like , to drag them after them through the golden gates of that sunshiny heaven of the Court .

Dull wheatsheaves , to be thrashed out of all the corn they have to yield , in the hope of dropping it to purpose , provided the hand be vigorous ( and jewelled ) that is flourished against them , and the brow-beating or cajoling flail be well applied , relentless , and tipped with gold . Indeed , my good friend and reader—yourself a Member of Parliament or hoping to be one , or wishing something through

the interference of one , and therefore all the more qualified to apprehend the justice of my political painting—indeed , my likelyto-be-prosperous , because pushing , friend , there are many placed upright upon that purple-coloured bench in the Lords , or nodding from that quarter-mile of crimson cushion in the House of Underlings , that are inane woolbags . It is the easiest thing in the world

to acquire a reputation for talent , provided you look occasionally fierce and hold your tongue . Say you are a great man—if you have money in your pocket—and people will believe you : they will stare at first ; but never mind that ! Take our advice , and only insist , and you will soon be so great as to only want a pedestal to step up upon . Men see a whole world of possibilities in you if you know how to sit at the top of your table and have a gilt knocker to your door .

Gentlemen having the advantage of a bald head , or w ho have acquired the accomplishment of snapping authoritatively , have got into Parliament , ere this , solely through the baskctfuls of envelopes which they have sent empty away . Bishops have fluttered in lawn , like white summer clouds ; rising men in the Church have grasped crooks before they were aware of it ; and ascetic Deans , whose only sackcloth has been that in which tho coals were contained which served

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1856-06-01, Page 14” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 6 July 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/frm_01061856/page/14/.
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Title Category Page
MASONIC REFOEM. Article 1
BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCHES OF CELBREATBD FREEMASONS. Article 3
THE SIGNS OV ENGLAND; Article 13
NOTES OF A YACHT'S CRUISE TO BALAKLAVA. Article 17
THE ANTIQUITY OF FREEMASONRY. Article 24
REVIEWS OF NEW BOOKS, Article 25
MUSIC. Article 27
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 29
THE PRINTERS' ALMSHOUSES. Article 36
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 37
METROPOLITAN. Article 46
INSTRUCTION. Article 52
PROVINCIAL. Article 57
ROYAL ARCH. Article 74
KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. Article 78
SCOTLAND Article 80
COLONIAL Article 81
AMERICA. Article 81
SUMMARY OF NEWS FOR MAY. Article 83
Obituary. Article 87
NOTICE. Article 88
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 88
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Untitled Article

we shall be rightly served if it obtains us a kick . Now , if in private it is not yet thbught quite doing the glorious thing to entrap your neighbour ., or to divert , with dexterous sleight of hand , the bread from his mouth ( like some penny or five-pound conjurer ) , whilst you deposit in it only the wrong end of your walking-stick ; surely , in

your public capacity , and when you are trusted as a servant of the nation , so sworn , over and over again , to guard its interests , it is something next to guilt—if it be not guilt itself—to shuffle , and job , and cut , villanously , and contrive , until all your patronage has been sifted into a great basin of gold just to put away in your own private corner-cupboard . We speak to the public

Catilines!—sellers of their country . But there are others , we think , sometimes more dangerous and intolerable , who sit so snugly and hug each other on that long bench of public patronage . Fools abound—incapables—great talkers and little doers—unwieldy Gogs and Magogs of conceit , with their large foolish heads wagging from side to side , winking with an air of wondrous wisdom ;—men

with an exaggerated osfrontis , on which is written all the cleverness of Parliament , but with a walnut of a heart;—big with the little , little with the big , placing their gripe upon the coat-skirt of any one before them , whose gift it is to lift them yet higher up the ladder of public advantage , or , Mawworm-like , to drag them after them through the golden gates of that sunshiny heaven of the Court .

Dull wheatsheaves , to be thrashed out of all the corn they have to yield , in the hope of dropping it to purpose , provided the hand be vigorous ( and jewelled ) that is flourished against them , and the brow-beating or cajoling flail be well applied , relentless , and tipped with gold . Indeed , my good friend and reader—yourself a Member of Parliament or hoping to be one , or wishing something through

the interference of one , and therefore all the more qualified to apprehend the justice of my political painting—indeed , my likelyto-be-prosperous , because pushing , friend , there are many placed upright upon that purple-coloured bench in the Lords , or nodding from that quarter-mile of crimson cushion in the House of Underlings , that are inane woolbags . It is the easiest thing in the world

to acquire a reputation for talent , provided you look occasionally fierce and hold your tongue . Say you are a great man—if you have money in your pocket—and people will believe you : they will stare at first ; but never mind that ! Take our advice , and only insist , and you will soon be so great as to only want a pedestal to step up upon . Men see a whole world of possibilities in you if you know how to sit at the top of your table and have a gilt knocker to your door .

Gentlemen having the advantage of a bald head , or w ho have acquired the accomplishment of snapping authoritatively , have got into Parliament , ere this , solely through the baskctfuls of envelopes which they have sent empty away . Bishops have fluttered in lawn , like white summer clouds ; rising men in the Church have grasped crooks before they were aware of it ; and ascetic Deans , whose only sackcloth has been that in which tho coals were contained which served

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