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  • Feb. 9, 1861
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, Feb. 9, 1861: Page 4

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Literature.

Literature .

EEVIEWS . First and Last : a Poem . Intended to Illustrate the Ways of God to Alan . Messrs . Longmans . 259 pp . A Spring Morning ' s Dream , with Somniloquence , and sTEipniviEN . By JOSEPH HAMBLETON . Messrs . Keut &

Co . 192 pp . Poem & . By M . S . HALL , Virtue & - 'Oo . 212 pp . The Mountain Prophet , the Mine , and , otlicr Poems . By JOHN HARRIS . Heylin & Co . 158 pp . The golden age of poetry has passed . Our authors who indulge in printing their compositions cannot be ranked , as a body , above the most ordinary rhymesters , and this is frequently marred by a total absence of rhythm or an acquaintance with the powers of ipoetical numbers .

First and Last is on a lofty : theme , and its . author seems to have imagined he has treated it with no small degree of success . This peeps out in . thegrandiose tone with which le dedicates the volume to his wife ; -but between the subject and its treatment there is a . grand falling off . His opening , however , is nothing more than poor , as may be judged from the first few lines : —

"My theme , the ways of God to . man . Bestow , Great Spirit , on thy suppliant , bending low , In deep humility , before thee , light To see his way through this obscure aright ; And oh I forgive if darkling he should stray From the true path , though seeking it alway . "

Any one attempting such a flight must place himself at a vast disadvantage , because Milton , in his Paradise Lost and Paradise Begamed , has , with such awe-inspiring and truly wonderful diction , penned " the inmost thoughts that hidden lie , " and made immortal music in his verse . That part of . First and Last , entitled the " Song of Adam and Eve , " has nothing in common with the blind bard of

the Commonwealth : it struts about in a ballad measure in she following jaunty style : — "In an ocean of light we are bathing , On the wings of the wind we fly ; The clouds are our throne , AVhere we sit alone , And rule over earth and sky .

"Oh ! the . bright gorgeous streaming around us , Of the many-hueil tints of day ; Ob ! tbe ravishing strain That send forth amain The spheres in their gladsome way . " So also the six following lines will show a hoiv great subject may be debased by twaddle . The scene of the annexed

is laid without the garden of Eden , and represents Eve addressing her first-born , Cain . It opens thus : — " Come , give me a kiss , Thou dear little bliss , AVhom the Lord in His mercy has sent me ; Come close to my breast , i Here , here is thy nest , :

Oh ! how thy sweet chirpings content me . " Such prattle , in such company and under such auspices , clearly indicates no very exalted notion ofthe subject , and a want of poetic grasp that should have made the author pause before rushing into print . A Slimmer Morning ' s Dream somewhat appalled us at first sight . Think , in this matter-of-fact age , of a poet

g iving us his title-page hi English , Hebrew , Greek , and Latin ! The author ventures , at his outset , to tell us he flatters himself "that he has succeeded in an attempt to trace from their source some of the wanderings of his own mind , and to mark their progress towards conviction ; " and while he modestly insinuates there is somo credit clue to Mm for having written " with a purpose , " lis disclaims all hope of "becoming fashionable and applauded as divine . " The chief portion of the book is devoted to a poom on the

subject of the trial of Socrates for teaching strange doctrine , and Mr . Hambleton treats it in the following spirit . The scene is supposed to take place at the fire-side of Anytus , his accuser : — " _ TOW Anutos , as darkness spread the sky on , Retired from business to his gunaikeion : There , with sweet interpose-of word and . lip , ihe

Told to his wife his thought . Unlike Xantippe , Fame by the growth of husband's patience earning , Or dames enrolled in books of proctors' learning , Oft to be cited in the Court Consistory , No name recorded in veracious history Kath left the wife of Anutos behind her : * Consult the wise king's proverbs , you wilbfind her True character set downand thus discover

, AAliy , as she loved her husband , he did lovelier . Slighting anachronism , for want of her name , A \ e call her ' mistress , ' with her husband ' s surname . Says Mrs . Anutos , I'm quite delighted ! I wonder , clearest , you so long have slighted The horrid things that ugly , bad , 6 ld . man . _ _ ays ! Oh , that it may be but a mother's fancies !

But much are my misgivings lest our darling Has caught that fellow ' s spirit ; not the snarling , Too sweet his temper is for that ; but questions Just like the silly and profane suggestions Of Socrates , our boy begins to ask me AVhen he comes in from school . I feel it task me To silence him , and let him know 'tis wicked To talk so . I could not think how he picked

Up the strange words he uses , till I watched-him , And , just as he had hid himself , I snatched him Prom a sly corner , where his funny vanity AVas hearkening to Socrates' profanity . ' Ah I now , ' said I , 'I see my pretty : roamer , AVhenee come the jests at what you learn : from Homer . ' 'Twould be my certain death , fond love I tell it thee , Should that dear child grow up to infidelity . "

The poem entitled Wide Awahe is a very good exemplar of its title in all but the opening portion , in which Mr . Hambleton takes occasion to tell those of his readers who may not be wide enough awake that he is the occupier of a cottage in the metropolitan borough of Marylebone—that parish

"AVhere once The Bourne in stream translucent flowed , And owned the grace that Mary's name bestowed , Hut now all-envious Destiny condemns The Bourne to join the sewers that poison Thames , As bloated Pride extends his hundred arms At call of men , whom sound of grandeur charms , Happy to have it said in ' Park' they dwell , That so no curious nose the shop may smell ,

V / hile lucre scraped at counters , grabbed at desks . Decks them as ' Gents , ' or bids address as ' Esqs . ;' There , slighting what he saw the world admired , Philologus a lowly cottage hired . "

¦ 'M . S . " is not a novice in print . The poems of ivhich the volume is mainly composed have appeared in various newspapers , periodicals , and magazines , and are here collected for the first time . They are , as may be supposed , of unequal merit , though there are none among them which can be pronounced bad . There is a certain power and grace about them , of ivhich the following is an average sample .- — "MARY MAGDALENE .

" 'Tis evening , breezes cool and calm Come through the portals from the palm ; And cedar trees supremely tall , AVhich grow without Jerusalem's wall . " In Simon's house the Saviour eats , Pigs , lentil cakes , permitted meats , AVhile through the open door come in Stragglers who seek heaven's truths to win ,

" Among them Mary Magdalene AVith silent countenance , and mien Something inclined , as if but prayer Ancl holy thought had motion there . "Down at the Saviour ' s feet she kneels ; His love hath broken guilt ' s dark seals . Softened a heart which joy andpain And worldly ills had touched in vain .

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1861-02-09, Page 4” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 23 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_09021861/page/4/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
CLASSICAL THEOLOGY.—XL. Article 1
STRAY THOUGHTS ON THE ORIGIN AND PROGRESS OF THE FINE ARTS. Article 2
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 3
Literature. Article 4
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART. Article 5
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 6
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 7
METROPOLITAN. Article 7
PROVINCIAL. Article 7
ROYAL ARCH. Article 14
KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. Article 15
COLONIAL. Article 17
MASONIC FESTIVITIES. Article 18
Obituary. Article 18
THE WEEK. Article 18
PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 20
NOTES ON MUSIC AND THE DRAMA. Article 20
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 20
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Literature.

Literature .

EEVIEWS . First and Last : a Poem . Intended to Illustrate the Ways of God to Alan . Messrs . Longmans . 259 pp . A Spring Morning ' s Dream , with Somniloquence , and sTEipniviEN . By JOSEPH HAMBLETON . Messrs . Keut &

Co . 192 pp . Poem & . By M . S . HALL , Virtue & - 'Oo . 212 pp . The Mountain Prophet , the Mine , and , otlicr Poems . By JOHN HARRIS . Heylin & Co . 158 pp . The golden age of poetry has passed . Our authors who indulge in printing their compositions cannot be ranked , as a body , above the most ordinary rhymesters , and this is frequently marred by a total absence of rhythm or an acquaintance with the powers of ipoetical numbers .

First and Last is on a lofty : theme , and its . author seems to have imagined he has treated it with no small degree of success . This peeps out in . thegrandiose tone with which le dedicates the volume to his wife ; -but between the subject and its treatment there is a . grand falling off . His opening , however , is nothing more than poor , as may be judged from the first few lines : —

"My theme , the ways of God to . man . Bestow , Great Spirit , on thy suppliant , bending low , In deep humility , before thee , light To see his way through this obscure aright ; And oh I forgive if darkling he should stray From the true path , though seeking it alway . "

Any one attempting such a flight must place himself at a vast disadvantage , because Milton , in his Paradise Lost and Paradise Begamed , has , with such awe-inspiring and truly wonderful diction , penned " the inmost thoughts that hidden lie , " and made immortal music in his verse . That part of . First and Last , entitled the " Song of Adam and Eve , " has nothing in common with the blind bard of

the Commonwealth : it struts about in a ballad measure in she following jaunty style : — "In an ocean of light we are bathing , On the wings of the wind we fly ; The clouds are our throne , AVhere we sit alone , And rule over earth and sky .

"Oh ! the . bright gorgeous streaming around us , Of the many-hueil tints of day ; Ob ! tbe ravishing strain That send forth amain The spheres in their gladsome way . " So also the six following lines will show a hoiv great subject may be debased by twaddle . The scene of the annexed

is laid without the garden of Eden , and represents Eve addressing her first-born , Cain . It opens thus : — " Come , give me a kiss , Thou dear little bliss , AVhom the Lord in His mercy has sent me ; Come close to my breast , i Here , here is thy nest , :

Oh ! how thy sweet chirpings content me . " Such prattle , in such company and under such auspices , clearly indicates no very exalted notion ofthe subject , and a want of poetic grasp that should have made the author pause before rushing into print . A Slimmer Morning ' s Dream somewhat appalled us at first sight . Think , in this matter-of-fact age , of a poet

g iving us his title-page hi English , Hebrew , Greek , and Latin ! The author ventures , at his outset , to tell us he flatters himself "that he has succeeded in an attempt to trace from their source some of the wanderings of his own mind , and to mark their progress towards conviction ; " and while he modestly insinuates there is somo credit clue to Mm for having written " with a purpose , " lis disclaims all hope of "becoming fashionable and applauded as divine . " The chief portion of the book is devoted to a poom on the

subject of the trial of Socrates for teaching strange doctrine , and Mr . Hambleton treats it in the following spirit . The scene is supposed to take place at the fire-side of Anytus , his accuser : — " _ TOW Anutos , as darkness spread the sky on , Retired from business to his gunaikeion : There , with sweet interpose-of word and . lip , ihe

Told to his wife his thought . Unlike Xantippe , Fame by the growth of husband's patience earning , Or dames enrolled in books of proctors' learning , Oft to be cited in the Court Consistory , No name recorded in veracious history Kath left the wife of Anutos behind her : * Consult the wise king's proverbs , you wilbfind her True character set downand thus discover

, AAliy , as she loved her husband , he did lovelier . Slighting anachronism , for want of her name , A \ e call her ' mistress , ' with her husband ' s surname . Says Mrs . Anutos , I'm quite delighted ! I wonder , clearest , you so long have slighted The horrid things that ugly , bad , 6 ld . man . _ _ ays ! Oh , that it may be but a mother's fancies !

But much are my misgivings lest our darling Has caught that fellow ' s spirit ; not the snarling , Too sweet his temper is for that ; but questions Just like the silly and profane suggestions Of Socrates , our boy begins to ask me AVhen he comes in from school . I feel it task me To silence him , and let him know 'tis wicked To talk so . I could not think how he picked

Up the strange words he uses , till I watched-him , And , just as he had hid himself , I snatched him Prom a sly corner , where his funny vanity AVas hearkening to Socrates' profanity . ' Ah I now , ' said I , 'I see my pretty : roamer , AVhenee come the jests at what you learn : from Homer . ' 'Twould be my certain death , fond love I tell it thee , Should that dear child grow up to infidelity . "

The poem entitled Wide Awahe is a very good exemplar of its title in all but the opening portion , in which Mr . Hambleton takes occasion to tell those of his readers who may not be wide enough awake that he is the occupier of a cottage in the metropolitan borough of Marylebone—that parish

"AVhere once The Bourne in stream translucent flowed , And owned the grace that Mary's name bestowed , Hut now all-envious Destiny condemns The Bourne to join the sewers that poison Thames , As bloated Pride extends his hundred arms At call of men , whom sound of grandeur charms , Happy to have it said in ' Park' they dwell , That so no curious nose the shop may smell ,

V / hile lucre scraped at counters , grabbed at desks . Decks them as ' Gents , ' or bids address as ' Esqs . ;' There , slighting what he saw the world admired , Philologus a lowly cottage hired . "

¦ 'M . S . " is not a novice in print . The poems of ivhich the volume is mainly composed have appeared in various newspapers , periodicals , and magazines , and are here collected for the first time . They are , as may be supposed , of unequal merit , though there are none among them which can be pronounced bad . There is a certain power and grace about them , of ivhich the following is an average sample .- — "MARY MAGDALENE .

" 'Tis evening , breezes cool and calm Come through the portals from the palm ; And cedar trees supremely tall , AVhich grow without Jerusalem's wall . " In Simon's house the Saviour eats , Pigs , lentil cakes , permitted meats , AVhile through the open door come in Stragglers who seek heaven's truths to win ,

" Among them Mary Magdalene AVith silent countenance , and mien Something inclined , as if but prayer Ancl holy thought had motion there . "Down at the Saviour ' s feet she kneels ; His love hath broken guilt ' s dark seals . Softened a heart which joy andpain And worldly ills had touched in vain .

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