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  • Aug. 1, 1855
  • Page 3
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, Aug. 1, 1855: Page 3

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Untitled Article

numbers are daily thinning to supply mind to the exhausted and inane intellect of a bygone age , represented very generally by the highest ranks , so that it is impossible almost to point out any great discoverer ¦ of science , statesman , legislator , or astute prelate , who is not sprung from a recently plebeian family . If the channels for this

migration from lower class to upper are facile and open , nothing but good must result , for the admission of new power and energy into influential eminence gives increased vitality to the mental circulation of a people ; but with increased education is indissolubly united a desire for its exhibition , as the vigour induced by training involves the craving for exercise ; any impediment , therefore , to this development ,

beyond a proper discipline to test its real excellence , is detrimental . In this respect , again , mind resembles steam ; it may be generated by education , diffused throughout myriads , condensed or applied by proper restrictions to work the most powerful machinery , but if compressed , and not allowed some valve for its superfluous expenditure , it infers , from its nature , an explosion . Now , when these explosions occur

popularly , they are styled revolutions or reformations , both beginning from the same source , namely , a general cognizance of and disgust at abuses , but terminating in the different issues of national improvement or deterioration , according as they are directed by a predominant mind , itself ruled by moral motive . Had Cromwell been Sobespierre ,

the revolution m England would have been protracted into greater bloodshed and terminated in national disgrace ; had William III . not exhibited the strictest sense of justice to two nations , and swayed both with equal intellect , he would have found himself unsupported at the battle of the Boyne , even if he had been welcomed at all , upon the shores of his father-in-law ' s kingdom .

This , then , appears the peculiar characteristic of the present crisis . We have educated the myriads , who are upturning the soil below us , like Titan under Etna , striving to assume the dynasty of rank and power ; whilst the craving for honest and just competition is thwarted and madly opposed , to their own injury , by the selfishness of men in office . The social safeguard of England has ever been found in her

middle class , wherein consist essentially her chief elements of national vigour . In all times of peril or disaster this portion of the community has served to right the vessel of the State , by placing its weight either against monarchical tyranny , aristocratic exclusiveness , or popular tumult . At present , the draft of superior mind from the lowest to the middle class appears sufficiently open , and the communication easy , from the extension of commercial enterprise , which

necessitates continual variations in social position ; but the channel of entrance from the middle to the highest ranks is impeded and rendered narrow by exclusive patronage . It is one of the generous glories (!) of our humanity to render that path most difficult to others by which we ourselves have ascended ; and the peculiar gratification to men in power , at the present day , appears to be niggardliness in diffusing patronage ; so that hence arises the fountain or spring of ail our present social disturbance . England has taught her middle

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1855-08-01, Page 3” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 31 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_01081855/page/3/.
  • List
  • Grid
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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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Untitled Article

numbers are daily thinning to supply mind to the exhausted and inane intellect of a bygone age , represented very generally by the highest ranks , so that it is impossible almost to point out any great discoverer ¦ of science , statesman , legislator , or astute prelate , who is not sprung from a recently plebeian family . If the channels for this

migration from lower class to upper are facile and open , nothing but good must result , for the admission of new power and energy into influential eminence gives increased vitality to the mental circulation of a people ; but with increased education is indissolubly united a desire for its exhibition , as the vigour induced by training involves the craving for exercise ; any impediment , therefore , to this development ,

beyond a proper discipline to test its real excellence , is detrimental . In this respect , again , mind resembles steam ; it may be generated by education , diffused throughout myriads , condensed or applied by proper restrictions to work the most powerful machinery , but if compressed , and not allowed some valve for its superfluous expenditure , it infers , from its nature , an explosion . Now , when these explosions occur

popularly , they are styled revolutions or reformations , both beginning from the same source , namely , a general cognizance of and disgust at abuses , but terminating in the different issues of national improvement or deterioration , according as they are directed by a predominant mind , itself ruled by moral motive . Had Cromwell been Sobespierre ,

the revolution m England would have been protracted into greater bloodshed and terminated in national disgrace ; had William III . not exhibited the strictest sense of justice to two nations , and swayed both with equal intellect , he would have found himself unsupported at the battle of the Boyne , even if he had been welcomed at all , upon the shores of his father-in-law ' s kingdom .

This , then , appears the peculiar characteristic of the present crisis . We have educated the myriads , who are upturning the soil below us , like Titan under Etna , striving to assume the dynasty of rank and power ; whilst the craving for honest and just competition is thwarted and madly opposed , to their own injury , by the selfishness of men in office . The social safeguard of England has ever been found in her

middle class , wherein consist essentially her chief elements of national vigour . In all times of peril or disaster this portion of the community has served to right the vessel of the State , by placing its weight either against monarchical tyranny , aristocratic exclusiveness , or popular tumult . At present , the draft of superior mind from the lowest to the middle class appears sufficiently open , and the communication easy , from the extension of commercial enterprise , which

necessitates continual variations in social position ; but the channel of entrance from the middle to the highest ranks is impeded and rendered narrow by exclusive patronage . It is one of the generous glories (!) of our humanity to render that path most difficult to others by which we ourselves have ascended ; and the peculiar gratification to men in power , at the present day , appears to be niggardliness in diffusing patronage ; so that hence arises the fountain or spring of ail our present social disturbance . England has taught her middle

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