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  • March 31, 1848
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The Freemasons' Quarterly Review, March 31, 1848: Page 112

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Page 112

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India.

mild ancl worthy prince , whose ancestor and mine were in this very city tied by the bonds of the warmest friendship . The present prospect which you have here before you , of their descendants joining in the act of laying this stone , after a period closely approaching to half a century , naturally suggests , were it not too long a task for the present occasion , a contrast between what India then was , and what she now is . The step she has taken is a marvellous one , and

the tokens of a further advance are not wanting . The prominent benefits which we now have , and of which , in those clays , a dream even woulcl have been deemed extravagant , are the wide diffusion of education , indigenous and Fnglish , the opening up of public roads , the establishment of newspapers , forming in some degree what is so great a desideratum in this country , a kind of public opinion ; and , though last not least , our rivers dotted with steam-boats , not established by government , but the

result of private enterprise , in which many of our native brethren are concerned . In reference to the wide spread of education I have only to call your attention to the fact , that many of the youths educated in our schools are as well grounded as in our schools in England ; and it is but very recently that we have seen at home a youth of Calcutta carrying away the prize in some branches of the medical profession from all his western contemporaries—turning once more to steam-boats , I myself recollect ,

nineteen years ago , when the first steam-boat which navigated the upper part of the Ganges made her appearance at Patna , and myriads flocked to see , as the magic ship , a thing now , to them , of every day occurrence . But there is another coming event which casts its shadow around us , and which , though not as yet an accomplished fact , cannot be omitted in this list . I allude to the steamers' younger , and equally vigorous , sister the railway . The blasting of the rocks to build the edifices , the busy hum of the miners diing for coal in the Vinclya rangethe felling of

gg , wood for the sleepers , the clinking of rivets in the rails seem already to be sounding in our ears . The change which has been worked in our own country by this wonderful agent is truly great ; hut here , where distance is one of the most formidable obstacles to civilization , what may not be expected ! Already do our Mussulman community hire steamboats at Bombay , to take them to Judda and hack again , and , aided by the safety of our roads , they perform in six months a journey which

formerly occupied from three to four years , ancl thousands yearly return safety to their homes , whereas formerly thousands perished in the way . It will not be many years ere the pilgrim to Gya and to Juggernauth will find his pilgrimage similarly shortened . It is curious to calculate what effect the rail will have on pilgrimages . Doubtless at first the effect will be to increase the number of those who visit these places of reputed sanctity ; but in the end , the credit of the mode of mortification will diminish . As distance is said to lend

enchantment to the view , so does it , in the form of difficulty , constitute the merit of an expiatory visit to a shrine . Remove the obstacle , ancl you destroy the merit . To a celebrated pilgrimage from London to Canterbury we owe one of the most original ancl powerful poems in the English tongue . The journey between those places occupied a time , which enabled the poet to attribute to a large body of pilgrims the telling of very many long tales , without a violation of probability . The time occupied at present in passing over the same space , would barely suffice to read one of those tales . I much doubt , if these pilgrims could now re-appear on the scene ,

“The Freemasons' Quarterly Review: 1848-03-31, Page 112” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 31 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fqr/issues/fqr_31031848/page/112/.
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Title Category Page
QUARTERLY REVIEW, SBCOHD SERIES, Article 1
TO BROTHER JOHN BIGG, WHOSE PUBLIC AND P... Article 2
CONTENTS. Article 3
THE GRAND ORIENT AND THE PROVISIONAL GOVERNMENT OF FRANCE. Article 4
THE MASTERS', PAST MASTERS', AND WARDENS' CLUB. Article 4
THE FREEMASONS' QUARTERLY REVIEW. Article 5
ON FREEMASONRY, Article 13
CHAPTER I. Article 17
THE FREEMASONS' LEXICON. Article 22
THE GRAND LODGE OF ENGLAND, AND THE REPRESENTATIVE SYSTEM. Article 30
AN ACCOUNT OF THE VICISSITUDES OF THE NEAPOLITAN MASONRY; Article 32
TO THE PROVINCIAL MEMBERS OF GRAND LODGE. Article 40
MISSILES FROM THE MOON. Article 42
GREAT SOLAR SPOT. Article 43
TO THE EDITOR. Article 45
TO THE EDITOR. Article 45
TO THE EDITOR. Article 46
TO THE EDITOR. Article 46
TO THE EDITOR. Article 47
TO THE EDITOR. Article 47
TO THE EDITOR. Article 47
TO THE EDITOR. Article 47
TO THE EDITOR. Article 48
TO THE EDITOR. Article 49
POETRY. Article 49
A MASON'S WISH. Article 50
MASONIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 51
QUARTERLY COMMUNICATION. Article 52
GRAND CONCLAVE OF ENGLAND AND WALES. Article 64
SUPREME GRAND COUNCIL FOR ENGLAND AND WALES. Article 64
THE CHARITIES. Article 65
THE REPORTER. Article 66
CHIT CHAT. Article 72
Obituary. Article 75
PROVINCIAL. Article 80
SCOTLAND. Article 93
IRELAND. Article 95
FOREIGN. Article 99
AMERICA.—UNITED STATES. Article 106
INDIA. Article 107
LITERARY NOTICES. Article 113
POSTCRIPT. Article 118
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 119
CONTENTS. Article 121
THE GENERAL ASSURANCE ADVOCATE, AND FREEMASONS' QUARTERLY REVIEW. Article 122
INDEX. Article 123
THE FREEMASONS' QUARTERLY REVIEWS. SECOND SERIES. Article 125
SM^^S^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^mlSj|.%yflyS;f^ Sj4... Article 126
FREEMASONS' QUARTERLY ADVERTISER. SECOND... Article 127
FREEMASONS' HOTEL, GREAT QUEEN STREET, L... Article 128
FREEMASONRY. BROTHER J. CURTIS, PIER HOT... Article 128
FBEEMASONRY. X.IRTE ENGRAVING OF THE STA... Article 128
FilEG.MASONKY. BROTHE R J. P. ACKLA M, M... Article 129
BEHOYAIi !!! W. EVANS, MASONIC JEWELLER ... Article 129
FREEMASONRY. A. D. LOEWENSTARK, MANUFACT... Article 129
NOTICE. THE GOLDEN REMAINS OF THE EARLY ... Article 130
Just Published, Price Sd., SUBSTANCE of ... Article 130
CITY OF LONDON LIFE ASSURANCE SOCIETY, 2... Article 130
DISEASED AND ESALTHY LIVES ASSURED. B'lE... Article 130
REDUCED RATES FOR TERM POLICIES. CLERICA... Article 131
ENGINEERS', MASONIC, AND GENERAL MUTUAL ... Article 132
Engineers', Masonic , and General Mutual... Article 133
BENIOWSKl'S ARTIFICIAL MEMORY. Lectures ... Article 133
COMFORT F OR TEH B ER F HET , &c. HALL a... Article 133
THE LONDON GENERAL TAILORING ESTABLISHME... Article 134
LIMBIRD'S MAGHNUM BONUM STEEL PENS. AT 6... Article 134
BROTHER W. POVEY, MASONIC BOOKBINDER AND... Article 134
fi ALL'S ANTIBILIOUS PILLS.—The most use... Article 135
THE LATE BROTHER R. B. PEAKE. Article 136
GOVERNESSES BENEVOLENT INSTITUTION. Article 137
JUST PUBLISHED , Price 5s. Cloth , A MIR... Article 141
CONTENTS OE A MIRROR FOR THE JOHANNITE MASONS. Article 142
LIST OF DR. OLIVER'S WORKS ON FREEMASONRY, Article 143
GOLDEN REMAINS OF EARLY MASONIC WRITERS. Article 146
Patronized by the Most Worshipful the Gr... Article 147
Just Published, price 2s. in Roan Tuck C... Article 148
TO THE MASTERS OF LODGES. Article 149
- 1 FOUR-FIFTHS, ot EIGHTY PER CENT, of ... Article 150
^ ^ , , i^V* * "" <¦ -^ is ^ ^ t* ' j £-... Article 150
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Page 112

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

India.

mild ancl worthy prince , whose ancestor and mine were in this very city tied by the bonds of the warmest friendship . The present prospect which you have here before you , of their descendants joining in the act of laying this stone , after a period closely approaching to half a century , naturally suggests , were it not too long a task for the present occasion , a contrast between what India then was , and what she now is . The step she has taken is a marvellous one , and

the tokens of a further advance are not wanting . The prominent benefits which we now have , and of which , in those clays , a dream even woulcl have been deemed extravagant , are the wide diffusion of education , indigenous and Fnglish , the opening up of public roads , the establishment of newspapers , forming in some degree what is so great a desideratum in this country , a kind of public opinion ; and , though last not least , our rivers dotted with steam-boats , not established by government , but the

result of private enterprise , in which many of our native brethren are concerned . In reference to the wide spread of education I have only to call your attention to the fact , that many of the youths educated in our schools are as well grounded as in our schools in England ; and it is but very recently that we have seen at home a youth of Calcutta carrying away the prize in some branches of the medical profession from all his western contemporaries—turning once more to steam-boats , I myself recollect ,

nineteen years ago , when the first steam-boat which navigated the upper part of the Ganges made her appearance at Patna , and myriads flocked to see , as the magic ship , a thing now , to them , of every day occurrence . But there is another coming event which casts its shadow around us , and which , though not as yet an accomplished fact , cannot be omitted in this list . I allude to the steamers' younger , and equally vigorous , sister the railway . The blasting of the rocks to build the edifices , the busy hum of the miners diing for coal in the Vinclya rangethe felling of

gg , wood for the sleepers , the clinking of rivets in the rails seem already to be sounding in our ears . The change which has been worked in our own country by this wonderful agent is truly great ; hut here , where distance is one of the most formidable obstacles to civilization , what may not be expected ! Already do our Mussulman community hire steamboats at Bombay , to take them to Judda and hack again , and , aided by the safety of our roads , they perform in six months a journey which

formerly occupied from three to four years , ancl thousands yearly return safety to their homes , whereas formerly thousands perished in the way . It will not be many years ere the pilgrim to Gya and to Juggernauth will find his pilgrimage similarly shortened . It is curious to calculate what effect the rail will have on pilgrimages . Doubtless at first the effect will be to increase the number of those who visit these places of reputed sanctity ; but in the end , the credit of the mode of mortification will diminish . As distance is said to lend

enchantment to the view , so does it , in the form of difficulty , constitute the merit of an expiatory visit to a shrine . Remove the obstacle , ancl you destroy the merit . To a celebrated pilgrimage from London to Canterbury we owe one of the most original ancl powerful poems in the English tongue . The journey between those places occupied a time , which enabled the poet to attribute to a large body of pilgrims the telling of very many long tales , without a violation of probability . The time occupied at present in passing over the same space , would barely suffice to read one of those tales . I much doubt , if these pilgrims could now re-appear on the scene ,

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