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  • The Masonic Magazine
  • Feb. 1, 1876
  • Page 16
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The Masonic Magazine, Feb. 1, 1876: Page 16

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    Article ON THE MOUNTAIN TOP. ← Page 2 of 2
    Article THE SPRIG OF ACACIA. Page 1 of 2 →
Page 16

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

On The Mountain Top.

Did not your spirits soar on high . Toward the pure sky above 1 Did ye not drink a deeper draught . From springs of deathless love 1 Did Faith , and Hope , and Charity Speak of their height and and breadth ,

SAvept by no thoughts that bore you past The floods of time and death 1 The sun sinks in the gloAving West , As doAvn the mountain slope , The festive bands UOAV take their way , With words of cheer and hope .

Each bore a scrap of granite rough , A relic of the day , When Nevada sent three hundred sons On her mountain top to pray .

The Sprig Of Acacia.

THE SPRIG OF ACACIA .

BY BRO . EEV . AVILLIAM TEBBS . SADLY , in the growing dusk , do the blossoms of the Acacia fall around me as I stretch forth my hand to pluck the sprig hanging by a mere shred of bark to the branch that gave it birth ; sorrowful ' are

the associations that croAvd through my mind as the snowy petals shower over me , for they speak to me of a life running rapidly to its close . Eagerly did I Avatch in their first shooting forth these beauteous products of

nature's hand ; and many aud many a time did I reckon on enjoying their fragrant loveliness—but a feAV short days and they have done their allotted work , and are now hastening to decay . And here , as 1 stand , beneath the

falling bloom , I muse upon my OAvn career , What a little Avhile it seems to me noAv , that I was only budding into being , and giving sAveet promise of a life , fragrant with good Avotks , to those who gave me existence , and Avho nurtured my tender youth . Where are they 1 Returnedlike

, these blossoms , to their mother-earth ! And TJ Well , hurrying to follow in ' their footsteps ! And Avhere is the fragrance of good that I promised in my early youth 1 Well nigh past and gone ! And whither ? Well ! Avhere is the fragrance of these

tender blossoms gone 1 Only God knoAvs this ! and only He , the other ! But of this I am assured , that each , if it shall have ever had existence , has done its Avork , and shall in no-wise be forgotten .

As thus pensively I muse , the sweet scent of a blossom hanging yet late upon its bough steals over my senses , and Avith it crowd into my mind ' s eye mental visions of a dim and distant past . I seem to behold a mother Avatching by the cradle of

her infant son—the only treasure that is left her now that her husband has been called to his rest—and tenderly she trims the infant ' s couch Avith the self-same boughs aud blossoms that have decked his father ' s tomb , and as the scent of the

dying flowers ascends , so , together Avith it , goes up that mother ' s prayers for the orphan ' s future good to the Father of the Fatherless and the lone vridow ' s Friend . One of these slips , I see , takes root , and as it grows and increases in age and size ,

so groAvs that little one in stature , increasing daily in goodly knoAvledge and fair Avisdom . Time speeds on . The sli p becomes a sapling , the sapilirig a tree ; the child a youth , the youth becomes a man ; and ere the widowed mother dies , none can excel , in all proud Tyre ' s fair cit y , the AvidoAv ' s son .

Swiftly Avmgs my mind on its onward course , and I behold young Hiram idolised by his felloAvs , and rapidly advanced by his monarch to one post of honour after another , until his kingly namesake sends him to exercise his craft in building , for a neighbouring rulera Temple for the Most

, High . The Temple is completed and dedicated , and the youthful architect is just reaping the Avell-merited reivard of his labour , bestoAved by the gracious favour of the brother monarchs , Avhen he revisits the home of his childhood and his father ' s

grave . Before he goes he snatches ' from the tree , which has groAvn with his growth , one little branch as a memento of bygone times , and then he Avends his way halfsorrowing , half-rejoicing , to the triumph of his art . Scarcely has he entered its portals Avhen he is hiddenby certain of

, his envious felloivs , to share Avith them Ins mystic recompense . Faithful to his trust he refuses , and rather gives back , into his Heavenly Father ' s hand , his life , than sully by a traitorous act—his rectitude of soul . Refusal brings death death to his

; coAvardly assailants , the necessity of concealment ; and the Sprig of Acacia , p lucked from the father ' s tomb , marks the unhalloAved grave of the murdered son .

“The Masonic Magazine: 1876-02-01, Page 16” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 21 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01021876/page/16/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
Monthly Masonic Summary. Article 1
THE ORIGIN AND REFERENCES OF THE HERMESIAN SPURIOUS FREEMASONRY. Article 2
GROWLS FROM GRUMBLERS. Article 7
GODFREY HIGGINS ON FREEMASONRY. Article 8
WOMAN'S CHOICE —THE STORY OF A HERO. Article 12
ON THE MOUNTAIN TOP. Article 15
THE SPRIG OF ACACIA. Article 16
THE SITE OF SOLOMON'S TEMPLE DISCOVERED. Article 17
TOGETHER. Article 21
MAY CHEPWORTH: A CLEVELAND SKETCH. Article 21
FREEMASONRY AND THE EARLY ENGLISH GILDS. Article 24
THE WOMEN OF OUR TIME. Article 28
CONTEMPORARY LETTERS ON THE FRENCH REVOLUTION. Article 30
WHAT HAPPENED AT A CHRISTMAS GATHERING. Article 34
NOTES ON LITER PURE, SCIENCE, AND ART. Article 37
THE SLEEPING BEAUTY. Article 41
THE NUMBER OF STARS WE CAN SEE. Article 42
Our Archaeological Corner. Article 43
Reviews. Article 44
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

On The Mountain Top.

Did not your spirits soar on high . Toward the pure sky above 1 Did ye not drink a deeper draught . From springs of deathless love 1 Did Faith , and Hope , and Charity Speak of their height and and breadth ,

SAvept by no thoughts that bore you past The floods of time and death 1 The sun sinks in the gloAving West , As doAvn the mountain slope , The festive bands UOAV take their way , With words of cheer and hope .

Each bore a scrap of granite rough , A relic of the day , When Nevada sent three hundred sons On her mountain top to pray .

The Sprig Of Acacia.

THE SPRIG OF ACACIA .

BY BRO . EEV . AVILLIAM TEBBS . SADLY , in the growing dusk , do the blossoms of the Acacia fall around me as I stretch forth my hand to pluck the sprig hanging by a mere shred of bark to the branch that gave it birth ; sorrowful ' are

the associations that croAvd through my mind as the snowy petals shower over me , for they speak to me of a life running rapidly to its close . Eagerly did I Avatch in their first shooting forth these beauteous products of

nature's hand ; and many aud many a time did I reckon on enjoying their fragrant loveliness—but a feAV short days and they have done their allotted work , and are now hastening to decay . And here , as 1 stand , beneath the

falling bloom , I muse upon my OAvn career , What a little Avhile it seems to me noAv , that I was only budding into being , and giving sAveet promise of a life , fragrant with good Avotks , to those who gave me existence , and Avho nurtured my tender youth . Where are they 1 Returnedlike

, these blossoms , to their mother-earth ! And TJ Well , hurrying to follow in ' their footsteps ! And Avhere is the fragrance of good that I promised in my early youth 1 Well nigh past and gone ! And whither ? Well ! Avhere is the fragrance of these

tender blossoms gone 1 Only God knoAvs this ! and only He , the other ! But of this I am assured , that each , if it shall have ever had existence , has done its Avork , and shall in no-wise be forgotten .

As thus pensively I muse , the sweet scent of a blossom hanging yet late upon its bough steals over my senses , and Avith it crowd into my mind ' s eye mental visions of a dim and distant past . I seem to behold a mother Avatching by the cradle of

her infant son—the only treasure that is left her now that her husband has been called to his rest—and tenderly she trims the infant ' s couch Avith the self-same boughs aud blossoms that have decked his father ' s tomb , and as the scent of the

dying flowers ascends , so , together Avith it , goes up that mother ' s prayers for the orphan ' s future good to the Father of the Fatherless and the lone vridow ' s Friend . One of these slips , I see , takes root , and as it grows and increases in age and size ,

so groAvs that little one in stature , increasing daily in goodly knoAvledge and fair Avisdom . Time speeds on . The sli p becomes a sapling , the sapilirig a tree ; the child a youth , the youth becomes a man ; and ere the widowed mother dies , none can excel , in all proud Tyre ' s fair cit y , the AvidoAv ' s son .

Swiftly Avmgs my mind on its onward course , and I behold young Hiram idolised by his felloAvs , and rapidly advanced by his monarch to one post of honour after another , until his kingly namesake sends him to exercise his craft in building , for a neighbouring rulera Temple for the Most

, High . The Temple is completed and dedicated , and the youthful architect is just reaping the Avell-merited reivard of his labour , bestoAved by the gracious favour of the brother monarchs , Avhen he revisits the home of his childhood and his father ' s

grave . Before he goes he snatches ' from the tree , which has groAvn with his growth , one little branch as a memento of bygone times , and then he Avends his way halfsorrowing , half-rejoicing , to the triumph of his art . Scarcely has he entered its portals Avhen he is hiddenby certain of

, his envious felloivs , to share Avith them Ins mystic recompense . Faithful to his trust he refuses , and rather gives back , into his Heavenly Father ' s hand , his life , than sully by a traitorous act—his rectitude of soul . Refusal brings death death to his

; coAvardly assailants , the necessity of concealment ; and the Sprig of Acacia , p lucked from the father ' s tomb , marks the unhalloAved grave of the murdered son .

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