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  • The Masonic Magazine
  • March 1, 1876
  • Page 23
  • THE WOMEN OF OUR TIME.
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The Masonic Magazine, March 1, 1876: Page 23

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    Article 1876. PAST, PRESENT, AND FUTURE. ← Page 2 of 2
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1876. Past, Present, And Future.

march . Our enemies , and they are numerous and powerful , charge us with making professions that are never realized : shall we not so act as to prove those charges false ? There needs reform in Masonry , as well

as in other things . AVe have too many lodges that are of no use to the Order , but rather an injury ; there are too many Masons whose lives are a foul blot upon its escutcheon . There needs a sifting and a purifying , a weeding out and a cutting off . Jfasons must be educated in the principles and duties of the Order ; and if they will

not learn nor practice , they should be " thrown over among the rubbish . " And now for 1876 , the great Centennial year ! We ask the co-operation , in our work of every good and true Mason . Help us by writing for us , sending us

information , g iving us facts and incidents and current events ; help us by sustaining us with your subscriptions , pay for it promptly , induce others to subscribe for it , and thus , by increasing its patronage , enable us to make it more instructive , more useful and

more worthy of the noble cause for which it labours . From the Masonic Review , an able American publication , quoted by our friend the Keystone .

The Women Of Our Time.

THE WOMEN OF OUR TIME .

BY CALEBS . AVoMEN IN THE DECLINE OF LlFE . Mv readers will at once understand , I hope and think , wh y I have used such periphrastic words to express a very simple state of

things , a very natural condition of being . For no woman , however strong-minded , likes being called " old ; " and " old women " would sound , therefore , as if intended for provocation , and " old gals " would be too " fast . " So I have invented for the nonce

a phrase which is very civil , and even somewhat poetical ; for I was anxious at the outset not to affront my female readers , especially those who are no longer } onng . It has been said that nothing in the world does so aggravate a woman as to

term her old . Y ou may heap abuse upon her devoted head , you may add invective to invective , and even expletive to expletive ; all this she will often bear patiently and

resignedly , but if you dare to make use of the little and magbal word " old , " the steam escapes , the kettle boils over ! AVhy should this be so ? AVho can venture to explain ? I can't , and therefore won ' t , and don't attempt to do so . I leave it to a

bolder writer , and an abler expounder of feminine psychology ; while I content myself with stating the fact , as a very indubitable fact in the normal existence of women . Being naturally a foe to exaggeration and " high falutin" of all

kinds , I would not so distinctly put forward such a statement in the careful and veracious pages of the " Masonic Magazine , " did I not believe it to be an incontestable truth . Well authenticated cases have come before me where elderly ladies close on the

" soixaintaine , " as the French say , have put themselves down in the Census at 32 , and even 27 ! Indeed , I believe it might be statistically deduced from the Census , that we have no women in England , or very few indeed , beyond the '' mezzotermin . " I can

even now , and so can many of my readers possibly , hear the indignant outcry : " Old woman , indeed ! AA hom do you call old woman , sir ? " So let us not say anything to hurt the feelings of those " good old souls , " butletus speak ofthem as those venerable clam es who are wending do wn the decline of life . There surely is nothing objectionable in this !

Now do not suppose that I am going to indulge in a tirade against elderly females ; I am going to do nothing of the kind . I have known a good many " old women" in my time ( I mean old women , not old men ) , good

" old gals "¦—sio dicitur our irreverent youth ;•—and very kind and good and pleasant they were , one and all , and dear friends to myself . Indeed 1 am inclined to think that a friendly , genial , well-educated old woman is a most agreeable companion

, even for the youngest of us all . Experience has come to her and told its warning tale ; illusions have faded , and frivolity is gone , and in their stead you behold life in its ripest maturity and most cultivated wisdom , animated by genial memories , and leavened ,

by heartfelt sympathy . I look upon a genuine old woman as a very loveable and lovely character . In this I , of course , necessarily include the religious element , which is a sine qud non , in my humble opinion ; as a godless old

“The Masonic Magazine: 1876-03-01, Page 23” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 24 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01031876/page/23/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
Monthly Masonic Summary. Article 1
THE INSTALLATION OF H.R.H. PRINCE LEOPOLD AS P.G.M OF OXFORDSHIRE. Article 1
THE SECOND MINUTE BOOK OF THE LODGE OF INDUSTRY, GATESHEAD. Article 4
TREED BY A TIGER. Article 5
DOES THE EARTH RECEIVE HEAT FROM THE SUN? Article 7
WHAT HAPPENED AT A CHRISTMAS GATHERING. Article 10
THE ARMAGH BELLS. Article 13
GODFREY HIGGINS ON FREEMASONRY. Article 13
THE ALBERT CHAPEL AT WINDSOR.* Article 17
SHALL MASONRY BE? Article 18
TO MY OLD APRON. Article 21
1876. PAST, PRESENT, AND FUTURE. Article 22
THE WOMEN OF OUR TIME. Article 23
FREEMASONRY IN PERU. Article 25
AN INTERESTING EVENT. Article 26
A FUNERAL LODGE. Article 27
CONTEMPORARY LETTERS ON THE FRENCH REVOLUTION. Article 30
SONNET. Article 34
THE SITE OF SOLOMON'S TEMPLE DISCOVERED. Article 35
SONNET. Article 39
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE AND ART. Article 40
THE ORIGIN AND REFERENCES OF THE HERMESIAN SPURIOUS FREEMASONRY. Article 45
SONNET. Article 47
THE MEANING AND DERIVATION OF SYMBOL. Article 47
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

1876. Past, Present, And Future.

march . Our enemies , and they are numerous and powerful , charge us with making professions that are never realized : shall we not so act as to prove those charges false ? There needs reform in Masonry , as well

as in other things . AVe have too many lodges that are of no use to the Order , but rather an injury ; there are too many Masons whose lives are a foul blot upon its escutcheon . There needs a sifting and a purifying , a weeding out and a cutting off . Jfasons must be educated in the principles and duties of the Order ; and if they will

not learn nor practice , they should be " thrown over among the rubbish . " And now for 1876 , the great Centennial year ! We ask the co-operation , in our work of every good and true Mason . Help us by writing for us , sending us

information , g iving us facts and incidents and current events ; help us by sustaining us with your subscriptions , pay for it promptly , induce others to subscribe for it , and thus , by increasing its patronage , enable us to make it more instructive , more useful and

more worthy of the noble cause for which it labours . From the Masonic Review , an able American publication , quoted by our friend the Keystone .

The Women Of Our Time.

THE WOMEN OF OUR TIME .

BY CALEBS . AVoMEN IN THE DECLINE OF LlFE . Mv readers will at once understand , I hope and think , wh y I have used such periphrastic words to express a very simple state of

things , a very natural condition of being . For no woman , however strong-minded , likes being called " old ; " and " old women " would sound , therefore , as if intended for provocation , and " old gals " would be too " fast . " So I have invented for the nonce

a phrase which is very civil , and even somewhat poetical ; for I was anxious at the outset not to affront my female readers , especially those who are no longer } onng . It has been said that nothing in the world does so aggravate a woman as to

term her old . Y ou may heap abuse upon her devoted head , you may add invective to invective , and even expletive to expletive ; all this she will often bear patiently and

resignedly , but if you dare to make use of the little and magbal word " old , " the steam escapes , the kettle boils over ! AVhy should this be so ? AVho can venture to explain ? I can't , and therefore won ' t , and don't attempt to do so . I leave it to a

bolder writer , and an abler expounder of feminine psychology ; while I content myself with stating the fact , as a very indubitable fact in the normal existence of women . Being naturally a foe to exaggeration and " high falutin" of all

kinds , I would not so distinctly put forward such a statement in the careful and veracious pages of the " Masonic Magazine , " did I not believe it to be an incontestable truth . Well authenticated cases have come before me where elderly ladies close on the

" soixaintaine , " as the French say , have put themselves down in the Census at 32 , and even 27 ! Indeed , I believe it might be statistically deduced from the Census , that we have no women in England , or very few indeed , beyond the '' mezzotermin . " I can

even now , and so can many of my readers possibly , hear the indignant outcry : " Old woman , indeed ! AA hom do you call old woman , sir ? " So let us not say anything to hurt the feelings of those " good old souls , " butletus speak ofthem as those venerable clam es who are wending do wn the decline of life . There surely is nothing objectionable in this !

Now do not suppose that I am going to indulge in a tirade against elderly females ; I am going to do nothing of the kind . I have known a good many " old women" in my time ( I mean old women , not old men ) , good

" old gals "¦—sio dicitur our irreverent youth ;•—and very kind and good and pleasant they were , one and all , and dear friends to myself . Indeed 1 am inclined to think that a friendly , genial , well-educated old woman is a most agreeable companion

, even for the youngest of us all . Experience has come to her and told its warning tale ; illusions have faded , and frivolity is gone , and in their stead you behold life in its ripest maturity and most cultivated wisdom , animated by genial memories , and leavened ,

by heartfelt sympathy . I look upon a genuine old woman as a very loveable and lovely character . In this I , of course , necessarily include the religious element , which is a sine qud non , in my humble opinion ; as a godless old

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