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  • The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine
  • Oct. 20, 1860
  • Page 12
  • Poetry.
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, Oct. 20, 1860: Page 12

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    Article NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART. ← Page 2 of 2
    Article Poetry. Page 1 of 1
    Article THE RESURRECTION OF SICILY. Page 1 of 1
    Article TWO LOVE STORIES. Page 1 of 1
Page 12

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

Notes On Literature, Science, And Art.

sculpture-room ( ivhich used to be entrance-halls ) ivill be erected a large room for -National Gallery pictures , in continuation of the present suite of rooms . Mr . G . P . Watts has undertaken to paint in fresco the eastern end of the nave of the church ( St . James-the-Less ) in Garden Street ,

Westminster . The subject is to to be Our Lord , surrounded by Angels and Saints , a kind of hierarchy . The Ecclesiologist says it is to be " in true fresco , " and hopes that great care ivill be taken in the preparation of the plaister , so that the work may not suffer from damp cpiite as much as the frescoes in the neighbouring new Houses of Parliament have suffered . The roof of the nave of the

same church is also to be painted with half-figures of saints in medallions . We learn from the Ecclesiologist that Mr . Clayton has in hand a painting of " The Crucifixion , " for , and , and in fact on , the east Avail of the chapel at All Saints' Home , Margaret Street . Our Exemplars , Poor and , Eich to be edited by Mr . Matthew

Davenport Hill , the Recorder of Birmingham , with a preface be Lord Brougham , is on the eve of publication . Of French announcements there is a most interesting one —a translation , with notes , of a Chinese novel , Des deux files leiircshy M . Stanislas Jiilien , the celebrated Chinese scholar . From Germany we hear of a neiv library of Italian classics in

the originals , published by Brockhaus of Leipzig , and leading off with Manzoni ' s "Promessi Sposi . " , The increase of Protestant literature in Prance of late years has been often noted , and the appearance of a third edition of M . Emily de Bonnechose ' s Reformers before the Reformation may be taken as another sign of the times .

Poetry.

Poetry .

THE GOSE BEFORE . Alas ! we are prone to say : 'We have fallen on evil hours . ' When a- ripened spirit floats away-Like the breath of the fading ftoivers , And a seed on the wings of the dying day Is borne to the heavenly bowers !

Yet toil has a right to rest , And the single a right to go , Anel lovo has a right to save the best Prom the weight of the coming bloiv . We gaze on the joys of the parted blessed Through the tears of a selfish lA'oe . 'Tis blood , not tears , should fall

O'er the brave who breathe no more , For empty the breach in the crumbling wall Which they manned in the clays of yore , And who shall respond to the trumpet call To rescue the banner they bore ? Can the warrior now survey HOAV the distant combat wears ?

Let him learn to Avait—nor lashly say That the valiant have left no heirs—Till he watch the deeds of the changing day From a crOAvning height like theirs " Till the smoke of the fray Shall have rolled away On the breath of their ansAvering prayers .

The Resurrection Of Sicily.

THE RESURRECTION OF SICILY .

Again her brow Sicania rears Above the tomb : tAvo thousand years Have sorely swept her beauteous breast , Ami War forbidden her to rest . Yet War at last becomes her friend , And cries aloud" Thy grief shall . end ,

Sicania ! hear me ; rise again ; -i houteley . i hero treats thy chain . " AVAT - SAVAGE IA > -DO ; I .

Two Love Stories.

TWO LOVE STORIES .

i . Laura Leslie has a lover ; She is lovely , loving he ; The slimmer birds that sing above her Scarcely are so Withe as she . Happy clays ! when she awakens , Flowers from him are by her bed Every lonely hour she reckons

Brings a gift in Harry's stead . Every sunset , through the fioii'ers , Laura and her lover stray , Heedless of the fleeting hours , Heedless of the waning day . Laura ' s parents watch admiring LoA'e so tender , so complete ;

AVhile a little orphan hireling Plies a needle at their feet . What should now delay the marriage ? Every comfort they prepare ; House and gardens , horses , carriage , Tall to Laura Leslie ' s share . Soon upon a summer morning ,

Mary stands by Laura's side , Little orphan hands adorning Harry's young and happy bride . II . Orphan Mary has a lover ; Miles away from her is he ; The wintry clouds that are above her Scarcely are so sad as she .

Every morning , when she wakens , Prays she for her absent John ; On a knotted stick she reckons Every lonely day that ' s gone . Twice a year he leaves his labour , Walks across the countiy n-ide , And waits fov Mary in an arbour

, By the Leslies' garden side . First when she had seen him weary , Worn and ivasted by the heat , Simple-hearted Orphan Mary Askeel him in to take a seat . Twenty little minutes , stolen

From her ii'orking , fled aivay : Then she rose , with eyelids swollen j Laura rang ; she must not stay . Mary gave one kiss at parting , Turned , find lo ! across the liall , Angry looks at her were darting ; Angry eyes had seen it all .

Laura's parents watch'd . regretting , Time so painfully misspent ; What example she ivas setting To the Avhole establishment ! Mary blushed and stood convicted ; Often had she heard it said Followers ivere interdicted ;

Wherefore had she disobey'd ? What though . lohn ivas true and loving ? AVhat though he was all to her ? In the sphere were she i \ 'as moving He was but a " folloiver . " Tii'ice a-yeav , nois ' , Orphan Mary Waits till every servant sleeps ; Then , with footsteps slow and wary , To the lonely arbour creeps .

there , or nowhere , she must meet him ; Ere the morning he must go ; There , unseen , her kiss may greet him ; There , iinchicl , her tears may fioiv . Thus an angry witness dreading , Mary thinks her name her shame ; Should it never end in ivedding , Who shall bear the bitter blame ? MACJIIXLAX ' S MAGAZINE .

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1860-10-20, Page 12” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 5 July 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_20101860/page/12/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
STRAY THOUGHTS ON THE ORIGIN AND PROGRESS OF THE FINE ARTS. Article 1
FREEMASONRY IN NEW BRUNSWICK. Article 2
ARCHITECTURE AND ARCHÆLOOGY. Article 3
ROUND CHURCHES. Article 3
ESSEX ARCHÆOLOGICAL SOCIETY. Article 5
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 8
Literature. Article 9
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART. Article 11
Poetry. Article 12
THE RESURRECTION OF SICILY. Article 12
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 13
MASONIC RAMBLES. Article 13
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 13
THE BOYS' SCHOOL. Article 13
METROPOLITAN. Article 13
PROVINCIAL. Article 14
COLONIAL. Article 17
INDIA. Article 17
TURKEY. Article 18
AMERICA. Article 18
MARK MASONRY. Article 18
Obituary. Article 18
THE WEEK. Article 18
PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 19
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 20
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Notes On Literature, Science, And Art.

sculpture-room ( ivhich used to be entrance-halls ) ivill be erected a large room for -National Gallery pictures , in continuation of the present suite of rooms . Mr . G . P . Watts has undertaken to paint in fresco the eastern end of the nave of the church ( St . James-the-Less ) in Garden Street ,

Westminster . The subject is to to be Our Lord , surrounded by Angels and Saints , a kind of hierarchy . The Ecclesiologist says it is to be " in true fresco , " and hopes that great care ivill be taken in the preparation of the plaister , so that the work may not suffer from damp cpiite as much as the frescoes in the neighbouring new Houses of Parliament have suffered . The roof of the nave of the

same church is also to be painted with half-figures of saints in medallions . We learn from the Ecclesiologist that Mr . Clayton has in hand a painting of " The Crucifixion , " for , and , and in fact on , the east Avail of the chapel at All Saints' Home , Margaret Street . Our Exemplars , Poor and , Eich to be edited by Mr . Matthew

Davenport Hill , the Recorder of Birmingham , with a preface be Lord Brougham , is on the eve of publication . Of French announcements there is a most interesting one —a translation , with notes , of a Chinese novel , Des deux files leiircshy M . Stanislas Jiilien , the celebrated Chinese scholar . From Germany we hear of a neiv library of Italian classics in

the originals , published by Brockhaus of Leipzig , and leading off with Manzoni ' s "Promessi Sposi . " , The increase of Protestant literature in Prance of late years has been often noted , and the appearance of a third edition of M . Emily de Bonnechose ' s Reformers before the Reformation may be taken as another sign of the times .

Poetry.

Poetry .

THE GOSE BEFORE . Alas ! we are prone to say : 'We have fallen on evil hours . ' When a- ripened spirit floats away-Like the breath of the fading ftoivers , And a seed on the wings of the dying day Is borne to the heavenly bowers !

Yet toil has a right to rest , And the single a right to go , Anel lovo has a right to save the best Prom the weight of the coming bloiv . We gaze on the joys of the parted blessed Through the tears of a selfish lA'oe . 'Tis blood , not tears , should fall

O'er the brave who breathe no more , For empty the breach in the crumbling wall Which they manned in the clays of yore , And who shall respond to the trumpet call To rescue the banner they bore ? Can the warrior now survey HOAV the distant combat wears ?

Let him learn to Avait—nor lashly say That the valiant have left no heirs—Till he watch the deeds of the changing day From a crOAvning height like theirs " Till the smoke of the fray Shall have rolled away On the breath of their ansAvering prayers .

The Resurrection Of Sicily.

THE RESURRECTION OF SICILY .

Again her brow Sicania rears Above the tomb : tAvo thousand years Have sorely swept her beauteous breast , Ami War forbidden her to rest . Yet War at last becomes her friend , And cries aloud" Thy grief shall . end ,

Sicania ! hear me ; rise again ; -i houteley . i hero treats thy chain . " AVAT - SAVAGE IA > -DO ; I .

Two Love Stories.

TWO LOVE STORIES .

i . Laura Leslie has a lover ; She is lovely , loving he ; The slimmer birds that sing above her Scarcely are so Withe as she . Happy clays ! when she awakens , Flowers from him are by her bed Every lonely hour she reckons

Brings a gift in Harry's stead . Every sunset , through the fioii'ers , Laura and her lover stray , Heedless of the fleeting hours , Heedless of the waning day . Laura ' s parents watch admiring LoA'e so tender , so complete ;

AVhile a little orphan hireling Plies a needle at their feet . What should now delay the marriage ? Every comfort they prepare ; House and gardens , horses , carriage , Tall to Laura Leslie ' s share . Soon upon a summer morning ,

Mary stands by Laura's side , Little orphan hands adorning Harry's young and happy bride . II . Orphan Mary has a lover ; Miles away from her is he ; The wintry clouds that are above her Scarcely are so sad as she .

Every morning , when she wakens , Prays she for her absent John ; On a knotted stick she reckons Every lonely day that ' s gone . Twice a year he leaves his labour , Walks across the countiy n-ide , And waits fov Mary in an arbour

, By the Leslies' garden side . First when she had seen him weary , Worn and ivasted by the heat , Simple-hearted Orphan Mary Askeel him in to take a seat . Twenty little minutes , stolen

From her ii'orking , fled aivay : Then she rose , with eyelids swollen j Laura rang ; she must not stay . Mary gave one kiss at parting , Turned , find lo ! across the liall , Angry looks at her were darting ; Angry eyes had seen it all .

Laura's parents watch'd . regretting , Time so painfully misspent ; What example she ivas setting To the Avhole establishment ! Mary blushed and stood convicted ; Often had she heard it said Followers ivere interdicted ;

Wherefore had she disobey'd ? What though . lohn ivas true and loving ? AVhat though he was all to her ? In the sphere were she i \ 'as moving He was but a " folloiver . " Tii'ice a-yeav , nois ' , Orphan Mary Waits till every servant sleeps ; Then , with footsteps slow and wary , To the lonely arbour creeps .

there , or nowhere , she must meet him ; Ere the morning he must go ; There , unseen , her kiss may greet him ; There , iinchicl , her tears may fioiv . Thus an angry witness dreading , Mary thinks her name her shame ; Should it never end in ivedding , Who shall bear the bitter blame ? MACJIIXLAX ' S MAGAZINE .

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