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  • The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine
  • April 6, 1867
  • Page 5
  • THE NEMESIS: A TALE OF THE DAYS OF TRAJAN.
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, April 6, 1867: Page 5

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    Article LODGES OF INSTRUCTION. ← Page 2 of 2
    Article THE NEMESIS: A TALE OF THE DAYS OF TRAJAN. Page 1 of 6
    Article THE NEMESIS: A TALE OF THE DAYS OF TRAJAN. Page 1 of 6 →
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Lodges Of Instruction.

real Avorth and personal merit , therefore no brother shall be elected Master of a lodge , or appointed to any office therein merely on account of seniority or rank . " Nothing can be more express of positive than this condition , and where it is disregarded we see

the results in a miserable rendering of those ceremonies , serving only to excite a smile and a silent remark in the minds of those Masons who know how the duty should be done and Avho have seen it performed in a proper manner . The appointment to office

should in no sense be considered as a right , but as a reward for industry , and if the system was made general that no officer should be appointed unless he had shown his proficiency , and by his attention had deserved it , we should soon see every lodge worked in

a way that would confer honour upon the Craft . It is too much the practice to gloss over these defects , and occasionally when the working has been spoken of by visitors , and sometimes commended , a feeling would often arise whether those praises were deserved ,

and in place of them whether a total silence ought not , in justice , to have been maintained . These are matters , however , which must be left in the hands of the members , but at present the subject is one that is worthy of attention , and one , we trust , that will receive due consideration .

The Nemesis: A Tale Of The Days Of Trajan.

THE NEMESIS : A TALE OF THE DAYS OF TRAJAN .

By BRO . A . OSEAL HA A ' , K . M ., K . Gal ., Corresponding Member of the German Society , Leipzig ; "Knight Templar , Beet . ; Author of "The History of the Knights Templars " " Vara Queer ; " " Gatherings in Wanderings ; " " Songs and Ballads ; " "Poemata ; " "Legends ofEdviiburgli . " " Sfc , § "e ., < $ * c . ; Poet Laureate of the Ganongate , Kilwinning ; P . M . St . Stephens ; P . P . Z . of St . Andrews , H . A .

Chap . ; Sfc ; Ife . { Continued from page 250 . ) CHAPTER XXVIII . THE MESSENGER OP GOOD AND Evil TIDINGS . " A clown the street with hasty feet

The messenger has come , And fliougli MSIABAVS be bad yet greet II hii with a fair welcome . " " Caius , hoAV came you to fall iu love Avith Phryne , AAdien such a dear child as Myra is , Avas by

her side ?" " Myra , you jest Adrian , Myra indeed . Do you dare compare the two ? Why , there is as much difference betAveen Myra and Phryne as between a star and the sun . '"

" You must excuse me then , if , star gazer that I am , I choose the nig ht twinkler to Phcebus . " The cousins Avere seated in a room in Caius ' s house , the storm raging so furiously , that Adrian resolved to stay there all night .

The Nemesis: A Tale Of The Days Of Trajan.

" Balbus came out in strange colours to-night . It is wonderful how superstition can thrall a man ' s mind . " " Think you . so , Caius ? to my mind superstition rules the world . What are all our dreams ,

our hopes , our desires , but superstitions ? We desire poAver because Ave ha % * e a superstitious belief that it will make us happy , riches , love , learning , even religion , nothing but superstitions all . As the light shines through the horn of the lantern ,

so does the soul shine through the body . Cau Ave blame if the purity of the ray is dimmed by the protecting * horn ? Not so , remove the horn and the flame Avill be blown out , destroy the body ancl Avhere is the soul ?"

" Then the clearer the horn the purer the raj' ?" " Aye , and the purer the body the purer the soul , Could you account for the strange effect the spilling of the salt and wine had upon onr fellow banqueters V

" Not I . I do not believe in superstition . " " Ah poet , poet , is it not rather that you lose yourself in such witching images of superstition that you have no faith in any that comes not from your craft ? " ,

" Likely . I do not think I shall be drowned , because I never g-o afloat . I may be killed on the field , for I am a soldier , therefore I offer a sacrifice to Mars , and leave Neptune to look after the Avelfare of his own devotees . "

" Well ,, in spite of all my doubts , I must confess that the mythology of Rome is comfortable , where every honest man and every rogue can find a patron . What a droll assembly Olympus must be . "

Myra , on quitting Adrian that day in the garden , hastened to her chamber , and wrote a feAV lines on a slip of parchment . Calling to her the slave who had been with her on the night that Adrian rescued her from Marenna , and Avho , like herself

' Avas a Christian , she saicl : " Haste thee , Servia , to tho house of the lady Luciclora . Our good father , Paulas , will be there to-day . Leave this letter ancl ring for him , and say to the lady that it requires his best attention . " Paulus did not reach Lucidora's till late that

night , having been present at a Christian meeting in another part of Rome . He read Myra ' s letter with the liveliest interest . He was much interested in the young Roman , both as a distinguished , philosopher , ancl as a member of his society , and

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1867-04-06, Page 5” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 22 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_06041867/page/5/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
ADDRESS TO THE OFFICERS AND BRETHREN OF THE LODGE OF ANTIQUITY, MONTREAL. Article 1
LODGES OF INSTRUCTION. Article 4
THE NEMESIS: A TALE OF THE DAYS OF TRAJAN. Article 5
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 10
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 11
THE BOYS' SCHOOL.—MIDDLE-CLASS EDUCATION. Article 11
BYE LAWS. BYE-LAWS. BY-LAWS. Article 12
THE OCEAN YACHT RACE ACROSS THE ATLANTIC. Article 12
MASONIC MEMS. Article 13
METROPOLITAN. Article 13
PROVINCIAL. Article 13
SCOTLAND. Article 14
CANADA. Article 14
INDIA. Article 15
ROYAL ARCH. Article 15
MARK MASONRY. Article 16
RED CROSS KNIGHTS. Article 17
MASONIC FESTIVITIES. Article 18
MEETINGS OF THE SCIENTIFIC AND LEARNED SOCIETIES FOR THE WEEK ENDING APRIL. Article 18
THE WEEK. Article 18
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 20
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Lodges Of Instruction.

real Avorth and personal merit , therefore no brother shall be elected Master of a lodge , or appointed to any office therein merely on account of seniority or rank . " Nothing can be more express of positive than this condition , and where it is disregarded we see

the results in a miserable rendering of those ceremonies , serving only to excite a smile and a silent remark in the minds of those Masons who know how the duty should be done and Avho have seen it performed in a proper manner . The appointment to office

should in no sense be considered as a right , but as a reward for industry , and if the system was made general that no officer should be appointed unless he had shown his proficiency , and by his attention had deserved it , we should soon see every lodge worked in

a way that would confer honour upon the Craft . It is too much the practice to gloss over these defects , and occasionally when the working has been spoken of by visitors , and sometimes commended , a feeling would often arise whether those praises were deserved ,

and in place of them whether a total silence ought not , in justice , to have been maintained . These are matters , however , which must be left in the hands of the members , but at present the subject is one that is worthy of attention , and one , we trust , that will receive due consideration .

The Nemesis: A Tale Of The Days Of Trajan.

THE NEMESIS : A TALE OF THE DAYS OF TRAJAN .

By BRO . A . OSEAL HA A ' , K . M ., K . Gal ., Corresponding Member of the German Society , Leipzig ; "Knight Templar , Beet . ; Author of "The History of the Knights Templars " " Vara Queer ; " " Gatherings in Wanderings ; " " Songs and Ballads ; " "Poemata ; " "Legends ofEdviiburgli . " " Sfc , § "e ., < $ * c . ; Poet Laureate of the Ganongate , Kilwinning ; P . M . St . Stephens ; P . P . Z . of St . Andrews , H . A .

Chap . ; Sfc ; Ife . { Continued from page 250 . ) CHAPTER XXVIII . THE MESSENGER OP GOOD AND Evil TIDINGS . " A clown the street with hasty feet

The messenger has come , And fliougli MSIABAVS be bad yet greet II hii with a fair welcome . " " Caius , hoAV came you to fall iu love Avith Phryne , AAdien such a dear child as Myra is , Avas by

her side ?" " Myra , you jest Adrian , Myra indeed . Do you dare compare the two ? Why , there is as much difference betAveen Myra and Phryne as between a star and the sun . '"

" You must excuse me then , if , star gazer that I am , I choose the nig ht twinkler to Phcebus . " The cousins Avere seated in a room in Caius ' s house , the storm raging so furiously , that Adrian resolved to stay there all night .

The Nemesis: A Tale Of The Days Of Trajan.

" Balbus came out in strange colours to-night . It is wonderful how superstition can thrall a man ' s mind . " " Think you . so , Caius ? to my mind superstition rules the world . What are all our dreams ,

our hopes , our desires , but superstitions ? We desire poAver because Ave ha % * e a superstitious belief that it will make us happy , riches , love , learning , even religion , nothing but superstitions all . As the light shines through the horn of the lantern ,

so does the soul shine through the body . Cau Ave blame if the purity of the ray is dimmed by the protecting * horn ? Not so , remove the horn and the flame Avill be blown out , destroy the body ancl Avhere is the soul ?"

" Then the clearer the horn the purer the raj' ?" " Aye , and the purer the body the purer the soul , Could you account for the strange effect the spilling of the salt and wine had upon onr fellow banqueters V

" Not I . I do not believe in superstition . " " Ah poet , poet , is it not rather that you lose yourself in such witching images of superstition that you have no faith in any that comes not from your craft ? " ,

" Likely . I do not think I shall be drowned , because I never g-o afloat . I may be killed on the field , for I am a soldier , therefore I offer a sacrifice to Mars , and leave Neptune to look after the Avelfare of his own devotees . "

" Well ,, in spite of all my doubts , I must confess that the mythology of Rome is comfortable , where every honest man and every rogue can find a patron . What a droll assembly Olympus must be . "

Myra , on quitting Adrian that day in the garden , hastened to her chamber , and wrote a feAV lines on a slip of parchment . Calling to her the slave who had been with her on the night that Adrian rescued her from Marenna , and Avho , like herself

' Avas a Christian , she saicl : " Haste thee , Servia , to tho house of the lady Luciclora . Our good father , Paulas , will be there to-day . Leave this letter ancl ring for him , and say to the lady that it requires his best attention . " Paulus did not reach Lucidora's till late that

night , having been present at a Christian meeting in another part of Rome . He read Myra ' s letter with the liveliest interest . He was much interested in the young Roman , both as a distinguished , philosopher , ancl as a member of his society , and

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