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  • June 23, 1860
  • Page 10
  • THE AGE OF CONCEIT.
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, June 23, 1860: Page 10

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    Article Selections from Recent Poetry. ← Page 2 of 2
    Article DE CORONA. Page 1 of 1
    Article DE CORONA. Page 1 of 1
    Article THE AGE OF CONCEIT. Page 1 of 1
    Article PARIS UNDER NAPOLEON III. Page 1 of 1
Page 10

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

Selections From Recent Poetry.

Learning to swim , who suddenly is seized AVith panic that at once unnerves his limbs , Makes his brain giddy , drags him struggling down To the deep bottom , terrified and spent , AA'ith courage gone for ever . You may make AA'ith such continual training , not a groat High character , but something fair and sweet ,

And very fit to grace an honest hearth ; To share a good man's heart and confidence , And , like a violet worn upon his breast , AVith simple sweetness ever solace him .

Select another for apprenticeship To the world's service ; teach her tacitly—She'll seize your meaning quick enough , be sure—¦ The science of appearances ; to skim Upon the surfaces of Life , of Art , Of Knowledge , of Religion : never heed AVhat she is fitted for . She has no ear , No taste for music ?—That ' s unfortunate

, For music she must learn;—days , weeks , months , years , Of tears , and labour , and discouragement Must go to the performance of quadrilles , And " brilliant pieces , " jingle , crash and froth , Most vilely executed as a task By trembling , blundering fingers , to a group Of tortured listeners . She has no eye For form or colour ?—She must learn to draw

; To reproduce , with labour infinite , Some lithograph , conventional ancl false . — She must read too , —to say that she has read ; Must go to church , because 'tis right to give Two hours in seven days to certain forms , However tedious , to keep well with God , And set a good example to the poor . Adornment , dress are easier ; indeed ,

These almost come by nature ,- —like small talk ; Some training at the outset is required To make distinctions between elder sons And younger ; but this too is learnt in time . And so the little heart and little brain , Unexercised , dry up ; the empty form Still moves and speaks in ball-rooms , very like A woman , but at home the soulless thing Subsides again to dollhood without springs .

And so on with the rest . Of one you make A mawkish sentimentalist ; a fourth Becomes a harsh sectarian , morose Unbending and intolerant ; a fifth A feeble hoyden , making herself sick AVith smoking ; trying to talk slang and hide Her deadly terror of a wainscot mouse .

A sixth , no worse by nature than the rest , Falls into evil hands ; becomes the tool Of some designing woman , or the toy Of some base man . Lower and lower still She falls , she has not heart enough to cling AVhere first she fell aud go no deeper down , But drops from sin to vice ; grows cynical And utterly corrupted ; casts aside

Distinctions between right and wrong , admits The existence but of matter ; worships gain , Becomes divested of the instinctive love That reigns amid the very animals , More brutalized than brutes , and lives and dies A monstrous blot and stain to womanhood .

De Corona.

DE CORONA .

UT JOHN EDMUND MADE . REJOICE thou like that Spartan of old date , AA ho on one utterance of a soul sedate Stamped immortality ; content to be That which ho was , that others should believe " Sparta had many a worthier son than he ;" AVhere lesser spirits had succumbed , elate .

Do thou that great denial contemplate ! For oh , unworthy had it been to grieve At breath of popular rumour , or forget The selfrespect of proud humility ; Or the wreath cast on fortunate brows regret ; Or with impatience Fret his mighty heart ; Or , an inferior actor , vainly jirize The clamours ofthe few ; or learn the part

Of envy , basest note of the grand choirs That blend our discQrds with our harmonies ,

De Corona.

Poet—pass onward as thou hast begun ; Filled with the fate prophetic that inspires Heroes as seers ; let thee detraction strike Unfelt , or blame , or hate by thee alike Borne equally , as ills thou might'st not slum . As thine eye fixed upon the orient sun , So be thou watchful still in its decline I

Conscious that disciplined effort due was thine Ere won the goal of truth , and leaves that claim Their records from man's heart , deriding fame . Thine the staid mind and ever heedful eyes That reverence thyself and human ties ; Thy strengthening spirits be , love , patience , hope , And the miconqtiered will with life to cope ; So choose thy themes , so build thine ardent rhyme , That thou may'st live a Laureate evown'd by time .

The Age Of Conceit.

THE AGE OF CONCEIT .

BY OWEN MEK EDITH . The age is gone o ' er AVhen a man may in all things be all . AVe have more Painters , poets , musicians , and artists , no doubt , Than the great Cinquecento gave birth to ; . but out Of a million of mere dilettanti , when , when AA 111 a new Leonardo arise on our ken 1

He is gone with the age which , begat him . Our own Is too vast and too complex for one man alone To embody its purpose , and hold it shut close In the palm of his hand . There were giants in those Irreclaimable days : but in these days of ours In dividing the work ive distribute the powers . Yet a dwarf on a dead giant ' s . shoulders sees mors Than the 'live iant ' s eyesiht avail'd to explore ;

g g And in life ' s lengthened alphabet what used to be To our sires X Y Z is to us A B C . A Varini is roasted alive for his pains , But a Bacon comes after and picks up his brains . A Bruno is angrily seized by the throttle And hunted about by thy ghost , Aristotle , Till a More or Lavater step into his place , Then the world turns and makes an admiring grimace .

Once the men were so great and so few , they appear , Through a distant Olympian atmosphere , Like vast Caryatids upholding the age , Now the men are so many ancl small , disengage One man from the million to mark him , next moment The crowd sweeps him hurriedly out of your comment ; And since we seek vainly ( to praise in om- songs ) 'Mid our fellows the size ivhich to heroes belongs .

AVe take the whole age for a hero , in want Of a better ; and still , in its favour , descant On the strength and the beauty which , failing to find In any one man , we ascribe to mankind .

Paris Under Napoleon Iii.

PARIS UNDER NAPOLEON III .

BY CIIAHMS MACKAY . PAUIS , the bright , the fair , the libertine , Youthful in beauty , old in wickedness;—Paris , the ancient home of generous men , And now the sink of jobbers , gamblers , knaves;—Ruled by a master hand , whose iron grip Slays disobedience , but forgives all

else—A ice , meanness , ra-ime , degeneracy ancl sloth—Detained tlieni for awhile . The city swarmed AVith swaggering captains and their stunted men , Each with his marshal ' s visionary staff Safe in his knapsack , and with head uplift Saucily in the path ; for had they not AVithin short space strangled , against all law , A Republic ? slain it in the streets

young , And dragged his bleeding body through the mire ; And set an armed Empire in his place . Governed by beat of drum and bayonet thrust—A vulgar , slavish , gross , and carnal thing , AVithout a soul;—unless the bees have souls ? These yield a blind obedience to their chief , And feed aud swaddle it , and make it fat , And toil and moil , until th' appointed hour

AA hen in hot swoop they fall upon the drones , And kill the fluttering fathers of the State ; Or , may be , choose another sovereign To gorge and pamper as they did the last .

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1860-06-23, Page 10” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 9 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_23061860/page/10/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
CLASSICAL THEOLOGY.—XXIII. Article 1
THE IDEALS OF FREEMASONRY. Article 2
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 5
Literature. Article 7
NEW MUSIC. Article 9
Selections from Recent Poetry. Article 9
DE CORONA. Article 10
THE AGE OF CONCEIT. Article 10
PARIS UNDER NAPOLEON III. Article 10
INAUGURATION OF THE EOS LODGE AT CREFELD.* Article 11
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 13
METRO POLITAN. Article 13
PROVINCIAL. Article 13
MARK MASONRY. Article 15
KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. Article 17
ANCIENT AND ACCEPTED RITE. Article 17
AMERICA. Article 17
AUSTRALIA. Article 17
THE WEEK. Article 18
PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 20
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 20
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Selections From Recent Poetry.

Learning to swim , who suddenly is seized AVith panic that at once unnerves his limbs , Makes his brain giddy , drags him struggling down To the deep bottom , terrified and spent , AA'ith courage gone for ever . You may make AA'ith such continual training , not a groat High character , but something fair and sweet ,

And very fit to grace an honest hearth ; To share a good man's heart and confidence , And , like a violet worn upon his breast , AVith simple sweetness ever solace him .

Select another for apprenticeship To the world's service ; teach her tacitly—She'll seize your meaning quick enough , be sure—¦ The science of appearances ; to skim Upon the surfaces of Life , of Art , Of Knowledge , of Religion : never heed AVhat she is fitted for . She has no ear , No taste for music ?—That ' s unfortunate

, For music she must learn;—days , weeks , months , years , Of tears , and labour , and discouragement Must go to the performance of quadrilles , And " brilliant pieces , " jingle , crash and froth , Most vilely executed as a task By trembling , blundering fingers , to a group Of tortured listeners . She has no eye For form or colour ?—She must learn to draw

; To reproduce , with labour infinite , Some lithograph , conventional ancl false . — She must read too , —to say that she has read ; Must go to church , because 'tis right to give Two hours in seven days to certain forms , However tedious , to keep well with God , And set a good example to the poor . Adornment , dress are easier ; indeed ,

These almost come by nature ,- —like small talk ; Some training at the outset is required To make distinctions between elder sons And younger ; but this too is learnt in time . And so the little heart and little brain , Unexercised , dry up ; the empty form Still moves and speaks in ball-rooms , very like A woman , but at home the soulless thing Subsides again to dollhood without springs .

And so on with the rest . Of one you make A mawkish sentimentalist ; a fourth Becomes a harsh sectarian , morose Unbending and intolerant ; a fifth A feeble hoyden , making herself sick AVith smoking ; trying to talk slang and hide Her deadly terror of a wainscot mouse .

A sixth , no worse by nature than the rest , Falls into evil hands ; becomes the tool Of some designing woman , or the toy Of some base man . Lower and lower still She falls , she has not heart enough to cling AVhere first she fell aud go no deeper down , But drops from sin to vice ; grows cynical And utterly corrupted ; casts aside

Distinctions between right and wrong , admits The existence but of matter ; worships gain , Becomes divested of the instinctive love That reigns amid the very animals , More brutalized than brutes , and lives and dies A monstrous blot and stain to womanhood .

De Corona.

DE CORONA .

UT JOHN EDMUND MADE . REJOICE thou like that Spartan of old date , AA ho on one utterance of a soul sedate Stamped immortality ; content to be That which ho was , that others should believe " Sparta had many a worthier son than he ;" AVhere lesser spirits had succumbed , elate .

Do thou that great denial contemplate ! For oh , unworthy had it been to grieve At breath of popular rumour , or forget The selfrespect of proud humility ; Or the wreath cast on fortunate brows regret ; Or with impatience Fret his mighty heart ; Or , an inferior actor , vainly jirize The clamours ofthe few ; or learn the part

Of envy , basest note of the grand choirs That blend our discQrds with our harmonies ,

De Corona.

Poet—pass onward as thou hast begun ; Filled with the fate prophetic that inspires Heroes as seers ; let thee detraction strike Unfelt , or blame , or hate by thee alike Borne equally , as ills thou might'st not slum . As thine eye fixed upon the orient sun , So be thou watchful still in its decline I

Conscious that disciplined effort due was thine Ere won the goal of truth , and leaves that claim Their records from man's heart , deriding fame . Thine the staid mind and ever heedful eyes That reverence thyself and human ties ; Thy strengthening spirits be , love , patience , hope , And the miconqtiered will with life to cope ; So choose thy themes , so build thine ardent rhyme , That thou may'st live a Laureate evown'd by time .

The Age Of Conceit.

THE AGE OF CONCEIT .

BY OWEN MEK EDITH . The age is gone o ' er AVhen a man may in all things be all . AVe have more Painters , poets , musicians , and artists , no doubt , Than the great Cinquecento gave birth to ; . but out Of a million of mere dilettanti , when , when AA 111 a new Leonardo arise on our ken 1

He is gone with the age which , begat him . Our own Is too vast and too complex for one man alone To embody its purpose , and hold it shut close In the palm of his hand . There were giants in those Irreclaimable days : but in these days of ours In dividing the work ive distribute the powers . Yet a dwarf on a dead giant ' s . shoulders sees mors Than the 'live iant ' s eyesiht avail'd to explore ;

g g And in life ' s lengthened alphabet what used to be To our sires X Y Z is to us A B C . A Varini is roasted alive for his pains , But a Bacon comes after and picks up his brains . A Bruno is angrily seized by the throttle And hunted about by thy ghost , Aristotle , Till a More or Lavater step into his place , Then the world turns and makes an admiring grimace .

Once the men were so great and so few , they appear , Through a distant Olympian atmosphere , Like vast Caryatids upholding the age , Now the men are so many ancl small , disengage One man from the million to mark him , next moment The crowd sweeps him hurriedly out of your comment ; And since we seek vainly ( to praise in om- songs ) 'Mid our fellows the size ivhich to heroes belongs .

AVe take the whole age for a hero , in want Of a better ; and still , in its favour , descant On the strength and the beauty which , failing to find In any one man , we ascribe to mankind .

Paris Under Napoleon Iii.

PARIS UNDER NAPOLEON III .

BY CIIAHMS MACKAY . PAUIS , the bright , the fair , the libertine , Youthful in beauty , old in wickedness;—Paris , the ancient home of generous men , And now the sink of jobbers , gamblers , knaves;—Ruled by a master hand , whose iron grip Slays disobedience , but forgives all

else—A ice , meanness , ra-ime , degeneracy ancl sloth—Detained tlieni for awhile . The city swarmed AVith swaggering captains and their stunted men , Each with his marshal ' s visionary staff Safe in his knapsack , and with head uplift Saucily in the path ; for had they not AVithin short space strangled , against all law , A Republic ? slain it in the streets

young , And dragged his bleeding body through the mire ; And set an armed Empire in his place . Governed by beat of drum and bayonet thrust—A vulgar , slavish , gross , and carnal thing , AVithout a soul;—unless the bees have souls ? These yield a blind obedience to their chief , And feed aud swaddle it , and make it fat , And toil and moil , until th' appointed hour

AA hen in hot swoop they fall upon the drones , And kill the fluttering fathers of the State ; Or , may be , choose another sovereign To gorge and pamper as they did the last .

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