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  • The Masonic Magazine
  • Feb. 1, 1876
  • Page 46
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The Masonic Magazine, Feb. 1, 1876: Page 46

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Page 46

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

Reviews.

" I ask myself , Is this a dream ? Will it all vanish into air ? Is there a land of such supreme And perfect beauty anywhere ? " Sweet vision ! Do not fade away ;

Linger until my heart shall take Into itself the summer day , And all the beauty of the lake . " Linger until upon my brain Is stamped an image of the scene , Then fade into the air again

, And be as if thou hadst not been . " Do Ave not all feel for " Belisarius " ?—' I am poor and old and blind ; The sun burns meand the Avind

, Blows through the city gate And coA ers me Avith dust From the Avheels of the august Justinian the Great .

" It AATIS for him I chased The Persians o ' er wild and waste , As General of the East ; Night after night I lay In their camps of yesterday ; Their forage A \ as my feast . " For himAvith sails of red

, , And torches at mast-head , Piloting the great fleet , I SAvept the Afrie coasts And scattered the Vandal hosts , Like dust in a Avindy street .

" For him I won again The Ausonian realm and reisrii , Rome and Parthenope ; And all the laud was mine From the summits of Apennine

To the shores of either sea . " For him , in my feeble age , I dared the battle ' s rage , To save Byzantium ' s state , When the tents of Zabergan , Like snoAv-drifts overran

The road to the Golden Gate " And for this , for this , behold . ' Infirm and blind and old , With gray , uncoA'ered head , Beneath the very arch Of my triumphal march , I stand and beg my bread !

" Methmks I still can hear , Sounding distinct and near , The Vandal monarch ' s cry , As , captive ancl disgraced , With majestic step he paced , — " All , all is Vanity ! " Ah ! vainest of all things

Is the gratitude of kings ; The p laudits of the croAvd Are but the clatter of feet At midnight in the street , HOIIOAV and restless and loud . " But the bitterest disgrace

Is to see for ever the face Of the Monk of Ephesus ! The unconquerable will This , too , can bear;—I still Am Belisarius " ! Is there not a depth of true poetry in

this sonnet 1 " When I remember them , those friends of mine , Who are no longer here , the noble three , Who half my life Avere more than friends to me , Aud Avhose discourse Avas like a

generous Avme , I most of all remember the divine Something , that shone in them , and made us see The archetypal man , and' what might be The amplitude of Nature ' s first design .

In vain I stretch my hands to clasp their hands ; I cannot find them , Nothing now is left But a majestic memory . They mean-Avhile

Wander together in Elysian lands , Perchance remembering me , AVIIO am bereft Of their dear presence , aud , remembering , smile . "

We cannot better , Ave think , conclude these notes than with another version of the same sad old story , Avhich seems to have so much interest for the poet's mind and pen : —

"The doors are all Avide open ; at the gate The blossomed lilacs counterfeit » blaze , And seem to warm the air ; a dreamy haze

“The Masonic Magazine: 1876-02-01, Page 46” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 21 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01021876/page/46/.
  • List
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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.

Reviews.

" I ask myself , Is this a dream ? Will it all vanish into air ? Is there a land of such supreme And perfect beauty anywhere ? " Sweet vision ! Do not fade away ;

Linger until my heart shall take Into itself the summer day , And all the beauty of the lake . " Linger until upon my brain Is stamped an image of the scene , Then fade into the air again

, And be as if thou hadst not been . " Do Ave not all feel for " Belisarius " ?—' I am poor and old and blind ; The sun burns meand the Avind

, Blows through the city gate And coA ers me Avith dust From the Avheels of the august Justinian the Great .

" It AATIS for him I chased The Persians o ' er wild and waste , As General of the East ; Night after night I lay In their camps of yesterday ; Their forage A \ as my feast . " For himAvith sails of red

, , And torches at mast-head , Piloting the great fleet , I SAvept the Afrie coasts And scattered the Vandal hosts , Like dust in a Avindy street .

" For him I won again The Ausonian realm and reisrii , Rome and Parthenope ; And all the laud was mine From the summits of Apennine

To the shores of either sea . " For him , in my feeble age , I dared the battle ' s rage , To save Byzantium ' s state , When the tents of Zabergan , Like snoAv-drifts overran

The road to the Golden Gate " And for this , for this , behold . ' Infirm and blind and old , With gray , uncoA'ered head , Beneath the very arch Of my triumphal march , I stand and beg my bread !

" Methmks I still can hear , Sounding distinct and near , The Vandal monarch ' s cry , As , captive ancl disgraced , With majestic step he paced , — " All , all is Vanity ! " Ah ! vainest of all things

Is the gratitude of kings ; The p laudits of the croAvd Are but the clatter of feet At midnight in the street , HOIIOAV and restless and loud . " But the bitterest disgrace

Is to see for ever the face Of the Monk of Ephesus ! The unconquerable will This , too , can bear;—I still Am Belisarius " ! Is there not a depth of true poetry in

this sonnet 1 " When I remember them , those friends of mine , Who are no longer here , the noble three , Who half my life Avere more than friends to me , Aud Avhose discourse Avas like a

generous Avme , I most of all remember the divine Something , that shone in them , and made us see The archetypal man , and' what might be The amplitude of Nature ' s first design .

In vain I stretch my hands to clasp their hands ; I cannot find them , Nothing now is left But a majestic memory . They mean-Avhile

Wander together in Elysian lands , Perchance remembering me , AVIIO am bereft Of their dear presence , aud , remembering , smile . "

We cannot better , Ave think , conclude these notes than with another version of the same sad old story , Avhich seems to have so much interest for the poet's mind and pen : —

"The doors are all Avide open ; at the gate The blossomed lilacs counterfeit » blaze , And seem to warm the air ; a dreamy haze

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