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  • July 1, 1855
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, July 1, 1855: Page 8

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but it happens * that another existed in this case . This ingenious beast had formerly been used for an ignominious- purpose , According to the custom of the country , criminals had been bound upon his

back for the ^ purpose of being whipped ; and this was indicated by the holes which had been barbarously bored in his ears , to which the criminals were tied . The peasants have a superstitious horror of these animals , so that this badge of dishonour would serve to secure him a free passage .

But 3 > now , what was the impulse , and whence the guide , to this mysterious journey ? Neither instinct nor reason supplies us with any principles which will solve the difficulty ; and the same observation applies to all the above-related instances of the development of a faculty of which we can understand absolutely nothing , and which we cannot reduce to any rule , nor trace to any origin . These

migrations are not instinctive , like the hybernating migrations of certain animals ; for they seem to be prompted by no natural propensity , desire , or sensation , nor are they , for the most part , connected with the preservation of the animal . Neither do they come under the category of rational actions , unless indeed the reason of the lower animals , instead of being absorbed in the dictates of instinct , is far

more capacious in its powers and wider in its scope than human reason . There is , however , a close analogy between some of these locomotive propensities , and the periodical migrations of the inha » bitants of the ocean and of fresh-water rivers . At one season , instinct impels them to swim with the tide , at another , against it ; now they seek the shallows , now the deeper waters ,- at one time lying quietly

at the bottom of the ocean , at another , skimming at the surface . Still there is , so to speak , a motive for all this , and the end is obviously sustentation or propagation : the instinctive design is obvious ; whereas the knowledge which guides an animal over immense tracts of unvisited country must be intuitive , and , as far as our knowledge of nature extends , miraculous .

And this suggests a sentiment with which we shall close this sketch of some of the mysteries of nature , and it is this : we draw certain general conclusions from our very limited observation of nature , and these conclusions we call the laws of nature , and with an . assurance and arrogance of which no rational being ought to be guilty , we call every deviation from these arbitrary laws , anomalies !

If there are any real laws of nature , there can be no anomalies ; if no real laws , then no miracles . But the fact is , Almighty power is bound by no laws nor rules ; and after we have seen and observed all that we can see of the phenomena of nature , we can but say with Job , "Lo ! these are parts of His ways ! " Who shall scan the whole ?

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1855-07-01, Page 8” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 15 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_01071855/page/8/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
ART. Article 40
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 41
LODGES OF INSTRUCTION Article 60
ST. MARTIN'S HALL, LONG ACRE. Article 39
A FLIGHT. Article 25
A POETICAL ANSWER IS REQUESTED TO THE FOLLOWING ENIGMA. Article 26
APHORISMATA MASONICA. Article 27
REVIEWS OF NEW BOOKS. Article 28
masonic songs-no. 1. Article 37
ON HEARING A LITTLE CHILD SAY THE LORD'S PRAYER. Article 37
MUSIC. Article 38
SPECULATIVE RAMBLES AMONGST THE STARS. Article 15
TRAVELS BY A FREEMASON. Article 20
PROGRESS. Article 1
NOTES ON ANTIQUARIAN RESEARCH. Article 9
NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 43
MASONIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 43
METROPOLITAN Article 44
PROVINCIAL Article 45
FRANCE. Article 57
GERMANY. Article 57
COLONIAL Article 59
NOTICE. Article 63
METROPOLITAN LODGE MEETINGS FOR JULY. Article 60
CHAPTERS OF INSTRUCTION Article 61
Obituary Article 62
LIFE AND DEATH. Article 62
NEW POSTAL REGULATIONS. Article 63
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 63
ERRATUM. Article 64
ANIMAL AND HUMAN INSTINCT. Article 6
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Page 8

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

Untitled Article

but it happens * that another existed in this case . This ingenious beast had formerly been used for an ignominious- purpose , According to the custom of the country , criminals had been bound upon his

back for the ^ purpose of being whipped ; and this was indicated by the holes which had been barbarously bored in his ears , to which the criminals were tied . The peasants have a superstitious horror of these animals , so that this badge of dishonour would serve to secure him a free passage .

But 3 > now , what was the impulse , and whence the guide , to this mysterious journey ? Neither instinct nor reason supplies us with any principles which will solve the difficulty ; and the same observation applies to all the above-related instances of the development of a faculty of which we can understand absolutely nothing , and which we cannot reduce to any rule , nor trace to any origin . These

migrations are not instinctive , like the hybernating migrations of certain animals ; for they seem to be prompted by no natural propensity , desire , or sensation , nor are they , for the most part , connected with the preservation of the animal . Neither do they come under the category of rational actions , unless indeed the reason of the lower animals , instead of being absorbed in the dictates of instinct , is far

more capacious in its powers and wider in its scope than human reason . There is , however , a close analogy between some of these locomotive propensities , and the periodical migrations of the inha » bitants of the ocean and of fresh-water rivers . At one season , instinct impels them to swim with the tide , at another , against it ; now they seek the shallows , now the deeper waters ,- at one time lying quietly

at the bottom of the ocean , at another , skimming at the surface . Still there is , so to speak , a motive for all this , and the end is obviously sustentation or propagation : the instinctive design is obvious ; whereas the knowledge which guides an animal over immense tracts of unvisited country must be intuitive , and , as far as our knowledge of nature extends , miraculous .

And this suggests a sentiment with which we shall close this sketch of some of the mysteries of nature , and it is this : we draw certain general conclusions from our very limited observation of nature , and these conclusions we call the laws of nature , and with an . assurance and arrogance of which no rational being ought to be guilty , we call every deviation from these arbitrary laws , anomalies !

If there are any real laws of nature , there can be no anomalies ; if no real laws , then no miracles . But the fact is , Almighty power is bound by no laws nor rules ; and after we have seen and observed all that we can see of the phenomena of nature , we can but say with Job , "Lo ! these are parts of His ways ! " Who shall scan the whole ?

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