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  • Sept. 15, 1866
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  • GEMS PROM BRO. LAWRENCE STERNE.
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, Sept. 15, 1866: Page 1

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

Gems Prom Bro. Lawrence Sterne.

GEMS PROM BRO . LAWRENCE STERNE .

LONDON , SATURDAY , SEPTEMBTUR 15 , 1866 .

It is as a writer of humour ancl pathos that this celebrated man is best known . Comparatively feAV regard him as a divine of considerable repute and standing . There are UOAV lying before ns some volumes of sermons by Laivrence Sterne . A . M .,

Prebendary of York , and Vicar of Sutton on the Forest , and of Stillington , near York , a feiv extracts from which may not be unacceptable to the members of an Order in which he ivas enrolled , and to Avhich he ivas greatly attached .

The work bears on the title-pages the nom de plume of " Mr . Yorick , " but his real name is prefixed to the sermons themselves .

The edition from Avhich Ave shall quote Avas printed for J . Dodsley in Pall Mall , 1765 . It may be premised that the sermons are not what ivould be called evangelical , but are rather those to which the epithet of " moral essays "

would , in the present day , be applied . Nevertheless they contain , in common Avith all of Sterne ' s writings , passages of great beauty , force , and pathos ; as for instance , the folloAving from the sermon entitled , " Inquiry after happiness : " —

" There is a plain distinction to be made betwixt pleasure and happiness . Eor though there can be no happiness Avithout pleasure—yet the

reverse of the proposition will not hold true . We are so made , that from the common gratifications of our appetites , and the impressions of a thousand objects , we snatch the one , like a transient gleam , without being suffered to taste the other , and

enjoy the perpetual sunshine and fair weather which constantly attend it . This , I contend , is only to be found in religion—in the consciousness of virtue—and the sure and certain hopes of a better life , which brightens all our prospects , and leaves

no room to dread disappointments—because the expectation of it is built upon a rock , whose foundations are as deep as those of heaven and hell . "

" And though in our pilgrimage through this world—some of us may be so fortunate as to meet with some clear fountains by the way , that may cool , for a feiv moments , the heat of this great thirst of happiness—yet our Saviour , who knew

the world , though He enjoyed but little of it , tells ns , that whosoever drinketh of this Avater will thirst again : and we shall all find by experience that it is so , and by reason that it must be so . "

He then concludes the sermon with a short observation upon our Grand Master Solomon ' s evidence as to the true source of what we are all seeking- after—happiness : — " Never did the busy brain of a liar and hectick

chymist search for the philosopher ' s stone Avith more pains and ardour than this great man did after happiness . He was one of the wisest enquirers into nature—had tried all her powers and capacities , and after a thousand vain speculations and

vile experiments , he affirmed at length , it lay hid in no one thing he had tried—like the chymist ' s projections all had ended in smoke , or what was worse , in vanity and vexation of spirit- —the

conclusion of the whole matter was this—that he advises every man who would be happy , to fear God and keep His commandments . " In Sermon II ., on Eccles . vii ., 2 , 3 , " It is better to go to the house of mourning , than to

the house of feasting , " the native humour of the man bursts forth , thus : — " That I deny—but let us hear the wise man's reasoning upon it— for that is the end of all men , and the living will lay it to his heart , SOITOAV is better than laughter '—

for a crack'd-brain'd order of Carthusian monks , I grant , but not for men of the ivorld : Eor what purpose do you imagine has God made us ? for the social siveets of the well-watered vallies where

He has planted us , or for the dry and dismal desert of a Sierra , Moreno , ? are the sad accidents of life , and the uncheery hours ivhich perpetually overtake us , are they not enough , but we must sally forth in quest of them , belye our own hearts ,

and say as your text would have us , that they are better than those of joy ? did the best of beings send us into the world for this end—to go weeping through it , to vex and shorten a life short and vexatious enough already ? do you think , my good

preacher , that He who is infinitely happy can envy us our enjoyments ? or that a being so infinitely kind Avould grudge a mournful traveller the short rest and refreshments necessary to support his spirits through the stages of a weary

pilgrimage ? or that He would call him to a severe reckoning , because in his way he had hastily snatched at some little fugnicious pleasures , merely to sAveeten this uneasy journey of life , and reconcile him to the rnggedness of the road , ancl the

. many hard jostlings he is sure to meet ivith ? Consider , I beseech you , what provision and accommodation the author of our being has prepared for us , that Ave might not go on our Avay sorrowing

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1866-09-15, Page 1” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 6 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_15091866/page/1/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
GEMS PROM BRO. LAWRENCE STERNE. Article 1
BRO. GOETHE'S PROFESSION OF FAITH. Article 2
FREEMASONRY IN THE UNITED STATES. Article 3
FREEMASONRY CONTRASTED WITH INTOLERANCE. Article 5
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 7
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 8
MASONIC RELIEF FUND. Article 8
THE BOYS' SCHOOL. Article 8
"MR, BROWN AT THE GIRLS' SCHOOL FESTIVAL. Article 9
Untitled Article 10
Untitled Article 10
MASONIC MEMS. Article 10
PROVINCIAL. Article 10
MARK MASONRY. Article 12
ANCIENT AND ACCEPTED RITE. Article 13
INDIA. Article 13
Untitled Article 13
REVIEWS. Article 14
THE UNKNOWN O. Article 16
Poetry. Article 16
PERSEVERANCE. Article 17
Untitled Article 17
THE WEEK. Article 17
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 20
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Gems Prom Bro. Lawrence Sterne.

GEMS PROM BRO . LAWRENCE STERNE .

LONDON , SATURDAY , SEPTEMBTUR 15 , 1866 .

It is as a writer of humour ancl pathos that this celebrated man is best known . Comparatively feAV regard him as a divine of considerable repute and standing . There are UOAV lying before ns some volumes of sermons by Laivrence Sterne . A . M .,

Prebendary of York , and Vicar of Sutton on the Forest , and of Stillington , near York , a feiv extracts from which may not be unacceptable to the members of an Order in which he ivas enrolled , and to Avhich he ivas greatly attached .

The work bears on the title-pages the nom de plume of " Mr . Yorick , " but his real name is prefixed to the sermons themselves .

The edition from Avhich Ave shall quote Avas printed for J . Dodsley in Pall Mall , 1765 . It may be premised that the sermons are not what ivould be called evangelical , but are rather those to which the epithet of " moral essays "

would , in the present day , be applied . Nevertheless they contain , in common Avith all of Sterne ' s writings , passages of great beauty , force , and pathos ; as for instance , the folloAving from the sermon entitled , " Inquiry after happiness : " —

" There is a plain distinction to be made betwixt pleasure and happiness . Eor though there can be no happiness Avithout pleasure—yet the

reverse of the proposition will not hold true . We are so made , that from the common gratifications of our appetites , and the impressions of a thousand objects , we snatch the one , like a transient gleam , without being suffered to taste the other , and

enjoy the perpetual sunshine and fair weather which constantly attend it . This , I contend , is only to be found in religion—in the consciousness of virtue—and the sure and certain hopes of a better life , which brightens all our prospects , and leaves

no room to dread disappointments—because the expectation of it is built upon a rock , whose foundations are as deep as those of heaven and hell . "

" And though in our pilgrimage through this world—some of us may be so fortunate as to meet with some clear fountains by the way , that may cool , for a feiv moments , the heat of this great thirst of happiness—yet our Saviour , who knew

the world , though He enjoyed but little of it , tells ns , that whosoever drinketh of this Avater will thirst again : and we shall all find by experience that it is so , and by reason that it must be so . "

He then concludes the sermon with a short observation upon our Grand Master Solomon ' s evidence as to the true source of what we are all seeking- after—happiness : — " Never did the busy brain of a liar and hectick

chymist search for the philosopher ' s stone Avith more pains and ardour than this great man did after happiness . He was one of the wisest enquirers into nature—had tried all her powers and capacities , and after a thousand vain speculations and

vile experiments , he affirmed at length , it lay hid in no one thing he had tried—like the chymist ' s projections all had ended in smoke , or what was worse , in vanity and vexation of spirit- —the

conclusion of the whole matter was this—that he advises every man who would be happy , to fear God and keep His commandments . " In Sermon II ., on Eccles . vii ., 2 , 3 , " It is better to go to the house of mourning , than to

the house of feasting , " the native humour of the man bursts forth , thus : — " That I deny—but let us hear the wise man's reasoning upon it— for that is the end of all men , and the living will lay it to his heart , SOITOAV is better than laughter '—

for a crack'd-brain'd order of Carthusian monks , I grant , but not for men of the ivorld : Eor what purpose do you imagine has God made us ? for the social siveets of the well-watered vallies where

He has planted us , or for the dry and dismal desert of a Sierra , Moreno , ? are the sad accidents of life , and the uncheery hours ivhich perpetually overtake us , are they not enough , but we must sally forth in quest of them , belye our own hearts ,

and say as your text would have us , that they are better than those of joy ? did the best of beings send us into the world for this end—to go weeping through it , to vex and shorten a life short and vexatious enough already ? do you think , my good

preacher , that He who is infinitely happy can envy us our enjoyments ? or that a being so infinitely kind Avould grudge a mournful traveller the short rest and refreshments necessary to support his spirits through the stages of a weary

pilgrimage ? or that He would call him to a severe reckoning , because in his way he had hastily snatched at some little fugnicious pleasures , merely to sAveeten this uneasy journey of life , and reconcile him to the rnggedness of the road , ancl the

. many hard jostlings he is sure to meet ivith ? Consider , I beseech you , what provision and accommodation the author of our being has prepared for us , that Ave might not go on our Avay sorrowing

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