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  • Jan. 1, 1882
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The Masonic Magazine, Jan. 1, 1882: Page 47

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devoted to thirty or forty lines of " preaching . " We wish the gifted author every success in his endeavour to do good in a legitimate way . The December number of The Burlington Magazine , edited by Miss Helen B . Mathers , the popular authoress of " Comin' thro' the Rye , " and numerous other novels in great demand " at all the libraries , " contains one or two items

of special excellence . " The Story of a Sin , " a fascinating serial from the pen of the editor , is brought to a conclusion , and we may remark , en passant , that the novel may now be had in its entirety from Chapman and Hall , the publishers of The Burlington . " The Wrong Man " is a clever and entertaining little romance , signed " S . S . " The author , whoever he or she may be , need not be ashamed of signing his or her productionsif they are all as meritorious

, as the present one ; and initials , we think , are ever out of place in a magazine of any pretentions , for they smack strongly of the amateur . " One Winter ' s Night , " by Horace Weir , is a most excellent story , full of power and deep human interest . It is founded mainly upon an appalling colliery explosion , which a few months back moved all England to the heart . The writer takes the facts , and weaves about them in a most masterly manner a

thread of love narrative , which is carried on skilfully and consistently to the end . Many of the character sketches are finely and firmly drawn . Mr . Weir holds up a brief for the rough , manly-hearted , and brave collier , and defends him eloquently from the abuse which he has had to endure in the pages of the satirical press . This vindication of the miner as a man is very fine , and we willwith the reader ' s permissionrecapitulate it . Here is the

frag-, , ment from the story in which it occurs : He does not get many yards before his foot strikes something that emits a metallic clang . It is a miner ' s tin tea-bottle . He holds it to the light of his lamp . There is writing upon it , evidently scratched with a nail . He reads the message—a message , doubtless from the dead .

Men and women—my readers—you may have read this message in the newspapers of the day . It is a sermon that many of us might fitly take to heart . The religion of the man who scratched the pathetic words may not have been Orthodox , but it was religious nevertheless . Think that in this man you see the typical miner . Let this rudely-written letter dispel ths unreasoning prejudice which some of you entertain against those who toil by day and by night in the dark depths of the coal mine . Dispel from your minds at once , and for ever , the caricature that does duty for the miner in the pages of the satirical press , that impossible creature who regales his bull-dog with beefsteakstoasts his friends in

, pint pewters of St . Julien or Veuve Cliquot , and—starvss his wife and children . Think of ths msn and lads in the dark mine , praying and singing hymns in the hearing of poor Michael Jones , husband and father , whose thoughts turned from things heavenly to the watching wife and sick child at home . Think of that scene where love and faith triumphed over and defied death and all its terrors . "Take physic pomp ; expose thyself to feel what wretches feel : So shalt thou shake the superflux of them ; and show the heavens more just . " Hear poor Michael Jones ' s dying words to his wife , and never more consider the miner less than " a man and a brother . "

Dear Margaret—There was Uoenty of lis altogether at 11 p . m . ; some teas singing hymns , lui my thoughts was on my little Michael . I thought that him and I would meet in Heaven at the same time . Oh , dear wife , Qod save you and the children , and pray for myself . Dear wife , farewell ! My last thoughts are about -you aruJ the children . Be sure and teach the children to pray for me . Oh , what a terrible position we are in !—Michael Jones . On this very night , the night ot the disaster , little Michael took eternal leave of his galloping horse , his small bird that sang with a loud voice , " Home , sweet home , " his battalion of wooden soldiers armed to the teeth , and his weeping mother , and was encircled in the loving arms of Him who suffers the little children to come unto Him , " for of such is the kingdom of Heaven . "

There are passages in " One Winter ' s Night , " which , for depth of pathos , are not surpassed by anything to be found in Bret Harte ' s " Luck of Roarinc Camp . " ° . The license indulged in by certain metropolitan so-called " society " journals is finding its counterpart in the provinces . Lewd papers of the baser sort are springing into existence iu many large towns ; their leading features being the retailing of coarse personalities and scurrilous chatter . Spiced with

“The Masonic Magazine: 1882-01-01, Page 47” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 10 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01011882/page/47/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
FREEMASONRY IN THE SEVENTEENTH CENTURY: CHESTER, 1650-1700. Article 1
A MASON'S STORY. Article 14
TO POVERTY. Article 16
HISTORY OF THE AIREDALE LODGE, No. 387, Article 17
THIRLMERE LAKE. Article 19
THE TWENTY-FOUR INCH GAUGE. Article 21
THE CHARTER OF COLOGNE. Article 22
OLD RECORDS OF THE LODGE OF PEEBLES. Article 32
ANOTHER YEAR. Article 36
DOCUMENTA LATOMICA INEDITA. Article 37
OF THE SOCIETY OF FREEMASSONS. Article 37
AFTER ALL; Article 43
LITERARY GOSSIP. Article 45
Untitled Article 47
MEET ON THE LEVEL AND PART ON THE SQUARE. Article 48
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Ar04700

devoted to thirty or forty lines of " preaching . " We wish the gifted author every success in his endeavour to do good in a legitimate way . The December number of The Burlington Magazine , edited by Miss Helen B . Mathers , the popular authoress of " Comin' thro' the Rye , " and numerous other novels in great demand " at all the libraries , " contains one or two items

of special excellence . " The Story of a Sin , " a fascinating serial from the pen of the editor , is brought to a conclusion , and we may remark , en passant , that the novel may now be had in its entirety from Chapman and Hall , the publishers of The Burlington . " The Wrong Man " is a clever and entertaining little romance , signed " S . S . " The author , whoever he or she may be , need not be ashamed of signing his or her productionsif they are all as meritorious

, as the present one ; and initials , we think , are ever out of place in a magazine of any pretentions , for they smack strongly of the amateur . " One Winter ' s Night , " by Horace Weir , is a most excellent story , full of power and deep human interest . It is founded mainly upon an appalling colliery explosion , which a few months back moved all England to the heart . The writer takes the facts , and weaves about them in a most masterly manner a

thread of love narrative , which is carried on skilfully and consistently to the end . Many of the character sketches are finely and firmly drawn . Mr . Weir holds up a brief for the rough , manly-hearted , and brave collier , and defends him eloquently from the abuse which he has had to endure in the pages of the satirical press . This vindication of the miner as a man is very fine , and we willwith the reader ' s permissionrecapitulate it . Here is the

frag-, , ment from the story in which it occurs : He does not get many yards before his foot strikes something that emits a metallic clang . It is a miner ' s tin tea-bottle . He holds it to the light of his lamp . There is writing upon it , evidently scratched with a nail . He reads the message—a message , doubtless from the dead .

Men and women—my readers—you may have read this message in the newspapers of the day . It is a sermon that many of us might fitly take to heart . The religion of the man who scratched the pathetic words may not have been Orthodox , but it was religious nevertheless . Think that in this man you see the typical miner . Let this rudely-written letter dispel ths unreasoning prejudice which some of you entertain against those who toil by day and by night in the dark depths of the coal mine . Dispel from your minds at once , and for ever , the caricature that does duty for the miner in the pages of the satirical press , that impossible creature who regales his bull-dog with beefsteakstoasts his friends in

, pint pewters of St . Julien or Veuve Cliquot , and—starvss his wife and children . Think of ths msn and lads in the dark mine , praying and singing hymns in the hearing of poor Michael Jones , husband and father , whose thoughts turned from things heavenly to the watching wife and sick child at home . Think of that scene where love and faith triumphed over and defied death and all its terrors . "Take physic pomp ; expose thyself to feel what wretches feel : So shalt thou shake the superflux of them ; and show the heavens more just . " Hear poor Michael Jones ' s dying words to his wife , and never more consider the miner less than " a man and a brother . "

Dear Margaret—There was Uoenty of lis altogether at 11 p . m . ; some teas singing hymns , lui my thoughts was on my little Michael . I thought that him and I would meet in Heaven at the same time . Oh , dear wife , Qod save you and the children , and pray for myself . Dear wife , farewell ! My last thoughts are about -you aruJ the children . Be sure and teach the children to pray for me . Oh , what a terrible position we are in !—Michael Jones . On this very night , the night ot the disaster , little Michael took eternal leave of his galloping horse , his small bird that sang with a loud voice , " Home , sweet home , " his battalion of wooden soldiers armed to the teeth , and his weeping mother , and was encircled in the loving arms of Him who suffers the little children to come unto Him , " for of such is the kingdom of Heaven . "

There are passages in " One Winter ' s Night , " which , for depth of pathos , are not surpassed by anything to be found in Bret Harte ' s " Luck of Roarinc Camp . " ° . The license indulged in by certain metropolitan so-called " society " journals is finding its counterpart in the provinces . Lewd papers of the baser sort are springing into existence iu many large towns ; their leading features being the retailing of coarse personalities and scurrilous chatter . Spiced with

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