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  • Aug. 1, 1855
  • Page 19
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, Aug. 1, 1855: Page 19

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mind could think out for itself , or it has risen nobly to the knowledge of the Eternal through a series of trials , such as Job trembled , suffered , hoped , or sorrowed under . And it had its wild fits of intemperate passion , out of which Time , the great elixir , rescued it . And so has history lived its life , through ignorance and crimp , savagery uncouth and civilization insincere ; and the periods of

darkness and doubt , when the hard lessons of experience were almost more than it could bear , have been succeeded by an honester age , when men are making up their minds to hold forth a friendly hand to their fellows , and to raise up them that fall , and guide the weary to some cool arbour , where the pleasant woodbine twines about the seat , and the honeysuckle , bowing to the breeze , showers down its fragrant blossoms , as a gift of love and truth from the plant-world to its erring master .

And here it seems to me a fitting opportunity to make mention of the wonderful law of Human Evolution , discovered by Comte , a man combining the most perfect method of mind with the results of a vast deal of erudition , acquired and connected according to mathematical

principles , and developed in conformity with the most philanthropic views of Religion . To consider the innumerable series of essays upon the p hilosophy of history to be finite and explicit , without dwelling with earnestness over the works of this great man , is to know little of the human heart and its sensibilities .

The great law of Human Evolution is one as widely known as it is wilfully ignored . 12 Amour pourprincipe ; TOrdre pour base ; et le Pr ogres pour but . Vivre pour Autrui . Impulse it is , and rarely judgment , which governs the actions of men for good or for evil . Eor , does not the judgment come cranking in after any action whatever , and condemn that which the heart at the same instant encourages ? It is impulse , brief and evanescent , which gives courage enough to

brute force to scale a fortress , to storm a battery , and to accomplish a victory . It is evanescent impulse which gives to the writer happy ideas and the power of expressing them ; to the philosopher , impulse gives the key to the divine mysteries of some grand and enduring theory . Impulse pulls the penny out of our pockets and places it in the palm of poverty ; and the feeling called charity coincides with the self-gratulation consequent upon the consciousness of having done that which is our duty to God and our neighbour .

L Amour pour principe . Here is the rock upon which the old empires split . Not brotherly love but expediency , not benevolence but self-aggrandisement , was the principle upon which the governments of the ancient world were conducted ; and yet , as I said before , religion was not wanting , as a guiding principle . But there

was no love in the ancient religion , or if there were , the knowledge of it was confined to a small section of the ancient populations . Socrates fe ] l a martyr in Hellas to the creed of brotherly sympathy . Democritus tried , failed , and laughed scornfully at the bitter mockery of the principle of expediency . Heraclitus wept for mankind , but as much with vexation at the want of success he met with , as in

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1855-08-01, Page 19” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 28 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_01081855/page/19/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
VOICES FROM DEAD NATIONS. Article 15
TRAVELS BY A FREEMASON. Article 11
ANASTATIC INK. Article 28
THE OUTCAST EMPIRE. Article 1
MASONIC SONGS.-N0. 2. Article 29
REVIEWS OF NEW BOOKS. Article 30
A GREEK FUNERAL. Article 39
FEMALE EDUCATION. Article 40
CORRESPONDENCE Article 41
NOTES ON ANTIQUARIAN RESEARCH. Article 21
ANSWER TO ENIGMA IN LAST NUMBER. Article 36
MUSIC. Article 37
A CORSICAN DIRGE. Article 38
TO THE EDITOR OF THE FREEMASONS MONTHLY MAGAZINE. Article 42
MADAME DE POMPADOUR AT HOME. Article 43
NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 44
MASONIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 46
MASONIC CHARITIES. Article 46
METROPOLITAN. Article 47
PROVINCIAL. Article 50
LIFE AND ITS MACHINERY. Article 5
COLONIAL Article 60
LONDON BON-ACCORD MARK MASTERS' LODGE. Article 60
SURREY ARCHAEOLOGICAL SOCIETY. Article 61
Obituary Article 63
NOTICE. Article 63
TO MASONIC TRAVELLERS. Article 63
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 63
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Page 19

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

Untitled Article

mind could think out for itself , or it has risen nobly to the knowledge of the Eternal through a series of trials , such as Job trembled , suffered , hoped , or sorrowed under . And it had its wild fits of intemperate passion , out of which Time , the great elixir , rescued it . And so has history lived its life , through ignorance and crimp , savagery uncouth and civilization insincere ; and the periods of

darkness and doubt , when the hard lessons of experience were almost more than it could bear , have been succeeded by an honester age , when men are making up their minds to hold forth a friendly hand to their fellows , and to raise up them that fall , and guide the weary to some cool arbour , where the pleasant woodbine twines about the seat , and the honeysuckle , bowing to the breeze , showers down its fragrant blossoms , as a gift of love and truth from the plant-world to its erring master .

And here it seems to me a fitting opportunity to make mention of the wonderful law of Human Evolution , discovered by Comte , a man combining the most perfect method of mind with the results of a vast deal of erudition , acquired and connected according to mathematical

principles , and developed in conformity with the most philanthropic views of Religion . To consider the innumerable series of essays upon the p hilosophy of history to be finite and explicit , without dwelling with earnestness over the works of this great man , is to know little of the human heart and its sensibilities .

The great law of Human Evolution is one as widely known as it is wilfully ignored . 12 Amour pourprincipe ; TOrdre pour base ; et le Pr ogres pour but . Vivre pour Autrui . Impulse it is , and rarely judgment , which governs the actions of men for good or for evil . Eor , does not the judgment come cranking in after any action whatever , and condemn that which the heart at the same instant encourages ? It is impulse , brief and evanescent , which gives courage enough to

brute force to scale a fortress , to storm a battery , and to accomplish a victory . It is evanescent impulse which gives to the writer happy ideas and the power of expressing them ; to the philosopher , impulse gives the key to the divine mysteries of some grand and enduring theory . Impulse pulls the penny out of our pockets and places it in the palm of poverty ; and the feeling called charity coincides with the self-gratulation consequent upon the consciousness of having done that which is our duty to God and our neighbour .

L Amour pour principe . Here is the rock upon which the old empires split . Not brotherly love but expediency , not benevolence but self-aggrandisement , was the principle upon which the governments of the ancient world were conducted ; and yet , as I said before , religion was not wanting , as a guiding principle . But there

was no love in the ancient religion , or if there were , the knowledge of it was confined to a small section of the ancient populations . Socrates fe ] l a martyr in Hellas to the creed of brotherly sympathy . Democritus tried , failed , and laughed scornfully at the bitter mockery of the principle of expediency . Heraclitus wept for mankind , but as much with vexation at the want of success he met with , as in

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