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  • The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine
  • July 20, 1861
  • Page 9
  • POETRY.
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, July 20, 1861: Page 9

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    Article CORRESPONDENCE. ← Page 3 of 3
    Article POETRY. Page 1 of 1
Page 9

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Correspondence.

actually endorsed all that had been done by pronouncing the Benediction ? If so , Mr . M . ' s " services appointed" must fall to the ground , for in the absence of such a service , the presence and approval—nay more , the episcopal blessing —• was formally given to the work , and in giving it to the work it also stamped the arrangements and details with the diocesan ' s approbation . If Mr . Mainwaring therefore ignores the bishop ' s power , what becomes of his own " p lain dealing . "

With regard to Mr . Mainwaring ' s " standing justified " supposing the Bishop of Salisbury did not answer , that is a matter between Mr . M ' s own conscience and his Maker . Let him see to that . He first attacked our order , and his attack would have been harmless but for one circumstanceits publication in one of thebest of newspapers , The Guardian . The poison has been disseminated by that journal , and all

that can be done is to endeavour to show the untenable position of the writer , and from , his own letters proceed to convict him of such a want of " plain dealing , " that few men would care to have attached to their names . In Mr . Mainwaring ' s second letter he shuffles out of sending Bro . Cooper ' s letter back ( " plain dealing " again ) , and advises the latter to read Bishop Armstrong ' s article on

Freemasonry . People should be careful how they stir a stagnant pool , for the 3 may "touch pitch and become defiled " in a like manner to Mr . Mainwaring . The article by Bishop Armstrong first appeared in The Christian Remembrancer , and as I happen to know something of the way in which it was concocted , I will give my brethren to understand with what " plain dealing" it was written . When the Rev . John Armstrong held a living hi the country a certain young man , one D A , was a dissenting

preacher , he was reputed to be a young man of good education , and had a desire to enter into Holy Orders in the Church of England . Several clergymen felt an interest in him , and as the Rev . John Armstrong was known to be a good churchman D- —— A was placed under his care . Now D A was a Mason , and when Mr . Armstrong found he could do but little with him , for D A—— had strong low church sentimentsand in fact is nowthough in

, , Holy Orders , nothing more than an ordained dissenter , it came out one day that he had some Masonic books in his room , and Mr . Armstrong questioned him about them , borrowed them , and in order to ridicule him , wrote from them such an attack upon Masonry as any clever man could have done . This paper made no difference to D A ; but soon after he left Mr . Armstrong ' sand the latter was

, so piqued with his want of success in not being able to make his former pupil a hi g h churchman that he laid the blame of it to D A ' s . Masonic faith , as Armstrong termed it , and without knowing what Masonry was , or being initiated , recast his paper , and sent it to The Christian Bemembrancer , in which it appeared , and , on account of its smartness , attracted considerable attention . If Mr . Mainwaring

rejoices over such a specimen of " plain dealing" he is perfectly welcome , but to my mind it was a paltry way of venting the annoyance Mr . Armstrong felt by attacking a society of which ho was entirely ignorant , ancl of whose principles he had only gathered scraps . Agreeing entirely with Mr . Mainwaring that such correspondence as he suggests " does not generally tend to

edification , " and hoping that , for the future , he will confine his observations to himself , and not cast suspicion on a society that has done more for the church than generations of his ancestors , who appear to havo become the impropriators of parochial tithes to the detriment of the church itself . I am , Dear Sir and Brother , yours truly ancl fraternally , MATTHEW COOKE , K . T ., S . P . R . > K

The mallet which the Earl of Orkney used in laying the foundation-stone of the ISTew Junior "United Service Club was the identical mallet used by Charles the Second in laying the foundation-stone of St . Paul ' s Cathedral , and which was presented by Sir Christopher AVren to the Masonic " Lodge of Antiquity , " of which he was Master .

Poetry.

POETRY .

THE OTHER DAY . Till , in my soul , she grow enshrined , A young Egcria of the mind!—T . K . Serve ;/ . It seems , love , but the other day Since thou and I were young together ; And yet we ' ve trod a toilsome way , And wrestled oft with stormy weather ;

I see thee in thy spring of years , Ere cheek or curl had known decay ; Ancl there ' s a music in mine ears , As sweet as heard the other day 1 Affection like a rainbow bends Above the past , to glad my gaze , And something still of beauty lends

To memory ' s dream of other days ; AVithin my heart there seems to beat That lighter , happier heart of youth , AVhen looks were kind , ancl lips were sweet , And love ' s world seemed a world of truth .

Within this inner heart of mine A thousand golden fancies throng , And whispers of a time divine Appeal with half-forgotten tongue : I know , I feel , 'tis but a dream , That thou art old and I am grey , And that , however brief it seem , AVe are not as the other day .

Not as the other day—when flowers Shook fragrance on our joyous track ; AVheii- Love could never count the hours , And Hope ne ' er dreamt of looking back : When , if the world had been our own , AVe thought how changed should be its state , — Then every cot should be a throne , The poor as happy as the great!—¦

AVhen we'd that scheme which Love imparts , That chain all interests to bind—The fellowship of human hearts , The federation of mankind ! Ancl though with us time travels on , Still relics of our youth remain , As some flowers , when their spring is gone , Yet late in autumn bloom again .

Alas ! ' mid worldly things ancl men , Love ' s hard to caution or convince ; And hopes , which were but fables then , Have left with us their moral since ; The twilight of the memory cheers The soul with many a star sublime , And still the mists of other years Hang dew-drops on the leaves of Time .

For what was then obscure and far Hath grown more radiant to our eyes , Although the promised , hoped-for star Of social love hath yet to rise . Still foot by foot the world is erost—Still onward , though it slow appear : AVho knows how slight a balance lost Might cast the bright sun from its sphere !

All time is lost in littleness ! All time , alas ! if rightly shown , Is but a shadow , more or less , Upon life ' s lowly dial thrown . The greatest pleasures , greatest grief , Can never bear the test of years : The pleasures vanish leaf hy leaf , The sorrow wastes away in tears .

Then , though it seem a trifling space Since youth , and mirth , ancl hope were ours , Yet those who love us most may trace The hand of age amid our flowers . Thus day by day life ' s ages grow ; The sands which hourly fall and climb Mark centuries in their ceaseless flow , And cast the destinies of Time ! CnAEEES SWAIS .

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1861-07-20, Page 9” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 22 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_20071861/page/9/.
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Title Category Page
MEMOIRS OF THE FREEMASONS OF NAPLES. Article 1
ARCHITECTURE AND ARCHÆOLOGY. Article 2
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 4
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART. Article 5
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 7
POETRY. Article 9
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 10
THE BOYS' SCHOOL. Article 10
METROPOLITAN. Article 11
PROVINCIAL. Article 11
ROYAL ARCH. Article 16
ANCIENT AND ACCEPTED RITE. Article 16
SCOTLAND. Article 17
TURKEY. Article 17
WESTERN INDIA. Article 17
AUSTRALIA. Article 18
THE WEEK. Article 18
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 20
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Correspondence.

actually endorsed all that had been done by pronouncing the Benediction ? If so , Mr . M . ' s " services appointed" must fall to the ground , for in the absence of such a service , the presence and approval—nay more , the episcopal blessing —• was formally given to the work , and in giving it to the work it also stamped the arrangements and details with the diocesan ' s approbation . If Mr . Mainwaring therefore ignores the bishop ' s power , what becomes of his own " p lain dealing . "

With regard to Mr . Mainwaring ' s " standing justified " supposing the Bishop of Salisbury did not answer , that is a matter between Mr . M ' s own conscience and his Maker . Let him see to that . He first attacked our order , and his attack would have been harmless but for one circumstanceits publication in one of thebest of newspapers , The Guardian . The poison has been disseminated by that journal , and all

that can be done is to endeavour to show the untenable position of the writer , and from , his own letters proceed to convict him of such a want of " plain dealing , " that few men would care to have attached to their names . In Mr . Mainwaring ' s second letter he shuffles out of sending Bro . Cooper ' s letter back ( " plain dealing " again ) , and advises the latter to read Bishop Armstrong ' s article on

Freemasonry . People should be careful how they stir a stagnant pool , for the 3 may "touch pitch and become defiled " in a like manner to Mr . Mainwaring . The article by Bishop Armstrong first appeared in The Christian Remembrancer , and as I happen to know something of the way in which it was concocted , I will give my brethren to understand with what " plain dealing" it was written . When the Rev . John Armstrong held a living hi the country a certain young man , one D A , was a dissenting

preacher , he was reputed to be a young man of good education , and had a desire to enter into Holy Orders in the Church of England . Several clergymen felt an interest in him , and as the Rev . John Armstrong was known to be a good churchman D- —— A was placed under his care . Now D A was a Mason , and when Mr . Armstrong found he could do but little with him , for D A—— had strong low church sentimentsand in fact is nowthough in

, , Holy Orders , nothing more than an ordained dissenter , it came out one day that he had some Masonic books in his room , and Mr . Armstrong questioned him about them , borrowed them , and in order to ridicule him , wrote from them such an attack upon Masonry as any clever man could have done . This paper made no difference to D A ; but soon after he left Mr . Armstrong ' sand the latter was

, so piqued with his want of success in not being able to make his former pupil a hi g h churchman that he laid the blame of it to D A ' s . Masonic faith , as Armstrong termed it , and without knowing what Masonry was , or being initiated , recast his paper , and sent it to The Christian Bemembrancer , in which it appeared , and , on account of its smartness , attracted considerable attention . If Mr . Mainwaring

rejoices over such a specimen of " plain dealing" he is perfectly welcome , but to my mind it was a paltry way of venting the annoyance Mr . Armstrong felt by attacking a society of which ho was entirely ignorant , ancl of whose principles he had only gathered scraps . Agreeing entirely with Mr . Mainwaring that such correspondence as he suggests " does not generally tend to

edification , " and hoping that , for the future , he will confine his observations to himself , and not cast suspicion on a society that has done more for the church than generations of his ancestors , who appear to havo become the impropriators of parochial tithes to the detriment of the church itself . I am , Dear Sir and Brother , yours truly ancl fraternally , MATTHEW COOKE , K . T ., S . P . R . > K

The mallet which the Earl of Orkney used in laying the foundation-stone of the ISTew Junior "United Service Club was the identical mallet used by Charles the Second in laying the foundation-stone of St . Paul ' s Cathedral , and which was presented by Sir Christopher AVren to the Masonic " Lodge of Antiquity , " of which he was Master .

Poetry.

POETRY .

THE OTHER DAY . Till , in my soul , she grow enshrined , A young Egcria of the mind!—T . K . Serve ;/ . It seems , love , but the other day Since thou and I were young together ; And yet we ' ve trod a toilsome way , And wrestled oft with stormy weather ;

I see thee in thy spring of years , Ere cheek or curl had known decay ; Ancl there ' s a music in mine ears , As sweet as heard the other day 1 Affection like a rainbow bends Above the past , to glad my gaze , And something still of beauty lends

To memory ' s dream of other days ; AVithin my heart there seems to beat That lighter , happier heart of youth , AVhen looks were kind , ancl lips were sweet , And love ' s world seemed a world of truth .

Within this inner heart of mine A thousand golden fancies throng , And whispers of a time divine Appeal with half-forgotten tongue : I know , I feel , 'tis but a dream , That thou art old and I am grey , And that , however brief it seem , AVe are not as the other day .

Not as the other day—when flowers Shook fragrance on our joyous track ; AVheii- Love could never count the hours , And Hope ne ' er dreamt of looking back : When , if the world had been our own , AVe thought how changed should be its state , — Then every cot should be a throne , The poor as happy as the great!—¦

AVhen we'd that scheme which Love imparts , That chain all interests to bind—The fellowship of human hearts , The federation of mankind ! Ancl though with us time travels on , Still relics of our youth remain , As some flowers , when their spring is gone , Yet late in autumn bloom again .

Alas ! ' mid worldly things ancl men , Love ' s hard to caution or convince ; And hopes , which were but fables then , Have left with us their moral since ; The twilight of the memory cheers The soul with many a star sublime , And still the mists of other years Hang dew-drops on the leaves of Time .

For what was then obscure and far Hath grown more radiant to our eyes , Although the promised , hoped-for star Of social love hath yet to rise . Still foot by foot the world is erost—Still onward , though it slow appear : AVho knows how slight a balance lost Might cast the bright sun from its sphere !

All time is lost in littleness ! All time , alas ! if rightly shown , Is but a shadow , more or less , Upon life ' s lowly dial thrown . The greatest pleasures , greatest grief , Can never bear the test of years : The pleasures vanish leaf hy leaf , The sorrow wastes away in tears .

Then , though it seem a trifling space Since youth , and mirth , ancl hope were ours , Yet those who love us most may trace The hand of age amid our flowers . Thus day by day life ' s ages grow ; The sands which hourly fall and climb Mark centuries in their ceaseless flow , And cast the destinies of Time ! CnAEEES SWAIS .

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