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  • The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine
  • Sept. 24, 1859
  • Page 9
  • A NYMPH'S PASSION.
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, Sept. 24, 1859: Page 9

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    Article Literature. ← Page 5 of 5
    Article Portry. Page 1 of 1
    Article A NYMPH'S PASSION. Page 1 of 1
    Article A NYMPH'S PASSION. Page 1 of 1
    Article THE PASSING BELL. Page 1 of 1
    Article IN PRAISE OF ALE. Page 1 of 1
Page 9

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

Literature.

of the Liverpool Society of Fine Arts . They represent scenes in the Belgian , Flanders , and Ardennes . AA ' e are informed that the sales continue highly satisfactory . M . Jacques Coste , one of the oldest journalists in Paris , and a- Chevalier of the Legion of Honour , has just died at tho age of sixty-two . M Coste was the founder and director of Le Temps , a paper of considerable influence under the reign of Louis Philippe , to which Loon Faucher ,

Men-nail ; Pages ( de lVVri'ioge ) ,-Ch . Nodi or , and other wollknown names , were contributors . He was one of the forty protestors ivhose life was to be sacrificed if Charles Iv . had succeeded in enforcing the July ordinances . AVhen Casiinir Perrier was minister , the Hotel Bonaparte , which was then occupied by M . Coste , became a point of attraction for the chief politicians , journalists , and litterateurs ol the dav .

Portry.

Portry .

SELECTIONS FROM POETRY OF THE SEVENTEENTH CENTURY . THE INQUIRY . BY THOMAS CAKEW . AMONGST the myrtlesas I walk'd

, , Love and my sig hs thus intertalked : " Tell me , " said I , in deep distress , AA'here may I find my shepherdess 1 " " Thou fool , " said Love , " know ' st thou not this—In everything that's good she is ? In yonder tulip go ancl seek ; There may ' st thou find her lip , her cheek ;

" In yon enamelled pansio by There thou shalt have her curious eye ; In bloom of peach , in rosr ' e bud , There wave the streamers of hev blood ; " In brightest lily there that stands , The emblem of her whiter hands ; In yonder rising hill there smell

Such sweets as in her bosom dwell . " ' ' 'Tis true , " said I -, and thereupon I went to pluck them , one by one , To make of parts a union ; But on a sudden all was gone . AA'ith that I stopt . Said Love : ' ' These be , Fond man , resemblances of thee ,

And , as these flowers , thy joy shall die , Even in the twinkling of an eye ; And . all thy hopes of her shall wither , Like these short sweets , thus knit together .

A Nymph's Passion.

A NYMPH'S PASSION .

BY BEN JONSON . I l . oyij , and he loves me again ; AJet dare I not tell who , For , if the nymphs should know my swain , I fear they'd love him too . Yet if it be not known , The pleasure is as good as none' '

, For that ' s a narrow joy is but our own . I'll tell that , if they be not glad , They yet may envy mc ; But then , if I grow jealous mad , Ancl of them pitied be , It were a plague 'bove scorn , And yet it cannot bo forborne ,

Unless my heart would as my thought bo torn . Ho is ( if they can find him ) fair , And fresh ancl fragrant too , As summer s sky or purged air , And looks as lilies do That are this morning blown . Yet , yet , I doubt he is not known ,

And fear , much more , that more of him be shown . But ho hath eyes so round , so bright , As make away my doubt , AVhere Love may all his torches light , Though fate had put them out . But , then , to increase my fears , AVhat nymph soe ' er his voice but hears AYill be my rival , though she have but cars . ' 1 .

A Nymph's Passion.

I'll tell no more , and yet I love , And he loves mo ; yet no One unbecoming thought doth move From either heart , I know , But so exempt from blame As it would bo to each a fame , If Love or Fear would let me tell his name .

The Passing Bell.

THE PASSING BELL .

( CIKOA 1603 . ) . COME , honest Sexton , take thy spade , And let my grave be quickly made ; Thou still art ready for the dead , Like a kind host to niako my bed . I now am come to be thy guest ; Let me iu some dark lodging rest , For I am wearyfull of pain

, , And of my pilgrimage complain . On Heaven ' s decree I waiting lie , Ancl all my wishes are to die . Hark ; I hear my passing bell ! Farewell , iny loving friends , farewell ! Make iny cold bed , good sexton , deep , That my poor bones may safely sleep

X Until that sad and joyful day \ AVhen from above a voice shall say—\ " AA ' ake , all yo dead , lift up your eyes ; \ The great Creator bids you rise . " \ Then do I hope , among the just , 'fo shake off this polluted dust . And , with new robes of glory dreit , To have access among the blest . Hirk ; I hear my passing bell ! Farewell , my loving friends , farewell !

In Praise Of Ale.

IN PRAISE OF ALE .

AVilKN the chill north caster blows , Ancl winter tells a heavy tale , And ' pies , and claws , and rooks , and crows , Do sit- and curse the frost ancl snows , Then give me ale . Ale in a Saxon rumkin then , Such as will make grim malkin prate ,

Bids valour bargain in tall men , Quickens tho poet's wits and pen , Despises fate . Ale that the absent battle fights , And forms tho march of Swedish drums ; Disputes the prince's laws and rights ; What ' s past and clone tells mortal wights ,

And what ' s to come . Ale that the ploughman ' s heart up keeps , And equals it to tyrant ' s thrones , And wipes the eye that ever weeps , And lulls in sweet and dainty sleeps Their very bones . Grandchild of Ceres , Bacchus ' s daughter ,

AViue ' s emulous neig hbour , even if stale . Ennobling all the nymphs or' water , And filling each man ' s heart with laughter—Oh , give me ale !

'TOILET AT THE FALLS . —In a few minutes , first one crept out , and then another , into the waiting room , feeling rather queer , and wondering if all tho party wore attired in the name extraordinary manner , and were evidently consoled when they saw others in the same plight :.- ' . n

, comp each person a tarpaulin cap like a coal heaver ' s , with a largo flap to keep the water from running down the back of the nock . One of the ladies looked most disconsolate at this last article ol attire ; but after holding it in her hand a few minutes , a smile appeared on her countenance , and she took out her pocket handkerchief , and deliberately put ifc over her head before crowning it with the hat . This arrangement was considered a great improvement , and was universally adopted . AVhen wo were all readJohn Bull ' s dislike to bo laughed at came into full play ; no one

y , would move , for we had to walk some little distance , and then cross the road . At last we persuaded one of the party to poop out and see if tho coast was clear . AA ' e could nee the ncgi-: > guide through tho door , grinning and showing his white teeth ; wo then heard him say , pointing at ns ou the sly , " Looked clar ! dis chile b'lieve tha white folks am " . ' raid . " This would never do , so off we started , and to our great deli ght , ive reached the point without being seen , —American Phnlngraphs .

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1859-09-24, Page 9” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 21 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_24091859/page/9/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
BETHEL-EBENEZER. Article 1
INTERNAL TEMPERATURE OF THE EARTH. Article 2
ARCHÆOLOGY. Article 4
Literature. Article 5
Portry. Article 9
A NYMPH'S PASSION. Article 9
THE PASSING BELL. Article 9
IN PRAISE OF ALE. Article 9
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 10
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 11
MASONRY IN THE PUNJAUB. Article 12
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 12
COLONIAL. Article 16
Obituary. Article 18
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.

Literature.

of the Liverpool Society of Fine Arts . They represent scenes in the Belgian , Flanders , and Ardennes . AA ' e are informed that the sales continue highly satisfactory . M . Jacques Coste , one of the oldest journalists in Paris , and a- Chevalier of the Legion of Honour , has just died at tho age of sixty-two . M Coste was the founder and director of Le Temps , a paper of considerable influence under the reign of Louis Philippe , to which Loon Faucher ,

Men-nail ; Pages ( de lVVri'ioge ) ,-Ch . Nodi or , and other wollknown names , were contributors . He was one of the forty protestors ivhose life was to be sacrificed if Charles Iv . had succeeded in enforcing the July ordinances . AVhen Casiinir Perrier was minister , the Hotel Bonaparte , which was then occupied by M . Coste , became a point of attraction for the chief politicians , journalists , and litterateurs ol the dav .

Portry.

Portry .

SELECTIONS FROM POETRY OF THE SEVENTEENTH CENTURY . THE INQUIRY . BY THOMAS CAKEW . AMONGST the myrtlesas I walk'd

, , Love and my sig hs thus intertalked : " Tell me , " said I , in deep distress , AA'here may I find my shepherdess 1 " " Thou fool , " said Love , " know ' st thou not this—In everything that's good she is ? In yonder tulip go ancl seek ; There may ' st thou find her lip , her cheek ;

" In yon enamelled pansio by There thou shalt have her curious eye ; In bloom of peach , in rosr ' e bud , There wave the streamers of hev blood ; " In brightest lily there that stands , The emblem of her whiter hands ; In yonder rising hill there smell

Such sweets as in her bosom dwell . " ' ' 'Tis true , " said I -, and thereupon I went to pluck them , one by one , To make of parts a union ; But on a sudden all was gone . AA'ith that I stopt . Said Love : ' ' These be , Fond man , resemblances of thee ,

And , as these flowers , thy joy shall die , Even in the twinkling of an eye ; And . all thy hopes of her shall wither , Like these short sweets , thus knit together .

A Nymph's Passion.

A NYMPH'S PASSION .

BY BEN JONSON . I l . oyij , and he loves me again ; AJet dare I not tell who , For , if the nymphs should know my swain , I fear they'd love him too . Yet if it be not known , The pleasure is as good as none' '

, For that ' s a narrow joy is but our own . I'll tell that , if they be not glad , They yet may envy mc ; But then , if I grow jealous mad , Ancl of them pitied be , It were a plague 'bove scorn , And yet it cannot bo forborne ,

Unless my heart would as my thought bo torn . Ho is ( if they can find him ) fair , And fresh ancl fragrant too , As summer s sky or purged air , And looks as lilies do That are this morning blown . Yet , yet , I doubt he is not known ,

And fear , much more , that more of him be shown . But ho hath eyes so round , so bright , As make away my doubt , AVhere Love may all his torches light , Though fate had put them out . But , then , to increase my fears , AVhat nymph soe ' er his voice but hears AYill be my rival , though she have but cars . ' 1 .

A Nymph's Passion.

I'll tell no more , and yet I love , And he loves mo ; yet no One unbecoming thought doth move From either heart , I know , But so exempt from blame As it would bo to each a fame , If Love or Fear would let me tell his name .

The Passing Bell.

THE PASSING BELL .

( CIKOA 1603 . ) . COME , honest Sexton , take thy spade , And let my grave be quickly made ; Thou still art ready for the dead , Like a kind host to niako my bed . I now am come to be thy guest ; Let me iu some dark lodging rest , For I am wearyfull of pain

, , And of my pilgrimage complain . On Heaven ' s decree I waiting lie , Ancl all my wishes are to die . Hark ; I hear my passing bell ! Farewell , iny loving friends , farewell ! Make iny cold bed , good sexton , deep , That my poor bones may safely sleep

X Until that sad and joyful day \ AVhen from above a voice shall say—\ " AA ' ake , all yo dead , lift up your eyes ; \ The great Creator bids you rise . " \ Then do I hope , among the just , 'fo shake off this polluted dust . And , with new robes of glory dreit , To have access among the blest . Hirk ; I hear my passing bell ! Farewell , my loving friends , farewell !

In Praise Of Ale.

IN PRAISE OF ALE .

AVilKN the chill north caster blows , Ancl winter tells a heavy tale , And ' pies , and claws , and rooks , and crows , Do sit- and curse the frost ancl snows , Then give me ale . Ale in a Saxon rumkin then , Such as will make grim malkin prate ,

Bids valour bargain in tall men , Quickens tho poet's wits and pen , Despises fate . Ale that the absent battle fights , And forms tho march of Swedish drums ; Disputes the prince's laws and rights ; What ' s past and clone tells mortal wights ,

And what ' s to come . Ale that the ploughman ' s heart up keeps , And equals it to tyrant ' s thrones , And wipes the eye that ever weeps , And lulls in sweet and dainty sleeps Their very bones . Grandchild of Ceres , Bacchus ' s daughter ,

AViue ' s emulous neig hbour , even if stale . Ennobling all the nymphs or' water , And filling each man ' s heart with laughter—Oh , give me ale !

'TOILET AT THE FALLS . —In a few minutes , first one crept out , and then another , into the waiting room , feeling rather queer , and wondering if all tho party wore attired in the name extraordinary manner , and were evidently consoled when they saw others in the same plight :.- ' . n

, comp each person a tarpaulin cap like a coal heaver ' s , with a largo flap to keep the water from running down the back of the nock . One of the ladies looked most disconsolate at this last article ol attire ; but after holding it in her hand a few minutes , a smile appeared on her countenance , and she took out her pocket handkerchief , and deliberately put ifc over her head before crowning it with the hat . This arrangement was considered a great improvement , and was universally adopted . AVhen wo were all readJohn Bull ' s dislike to bo laughed at came into full play ; no one

y , would move , for we had to walk some little distance , and then cross the road . At last we persuaded one of the party to poop out and see if tho coast was clear . AA ' e could nee the ncgi-: > guide through tho door , grinning and showing his white teeth ; wo then heard him say , pointing at ns ou the sly , " Looked clar ! dis chile b'lieve tha white folks am " . ' raid . " This would never do , so off we started , and to our great deli ght , ive reached the point without being seen , —American Phnlngraphs .

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