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  • The Masonic Magazine
  • March 1, 1878
  • Page 22
  • THE WORK OF NATURE IN THE MONTHS.
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The Masonic Magazine, March 1, 1878: Page 22

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    Article THE WORK OF NATURE IN THE MONTHS. ← Page 4 of 7 →
Page 22

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

The Work Of Nature In The Months.

Now sweet , now sad , are the p ictures the Yiolet conjures up" Even noAV , what affections the violet awakes ! ' ' says Campbell ; Avhilst Sir Edward Buhver Ly tton , in his " Corn Plowers , " asks : — ' ' Who that has loved knows not the tender tale Which flowers revealwhen lips are coy to tell ?

, Whose youth has passed not , dreaming in the vale Where the rathe Violets dAvell ? ******** Brief-lived first flowers—first love ? the hours steal on To prank the world in summer ' s pomp of hue , But Avhat can flaunt beneath a fiercer sun Worth Avhat we lose in you ?

Oft by a floiver , a leaf , in some loved book We mark the lines that charm us most ;—retrace Thy life—recall its loveliest passage;—look , Dead Violets keep the place !" To Eliza Cook ' s Avarin heart they told another story : — " 'Twas on a day in early spring . Before the butterfly took wing ;

******* A tiny boy with pallid face , Stood in the city ' s thickest place ; His limbs were lank as limbs could be , His tattered garments sad to see ; A basket on his arm he bore , Which gave to sight a little store Of Violets in bunches spread ,

Fresh gathered from their native bed . Their perfume scarcely lived at all , Their purple heads were very small , Their leaves were pinched and shrivelled in , Their stalks were turning dry and thin . 'Twas very , very cold spring weather , And Boy and FloAvers seemed starved together . " Need we say that she goes on to read us the same lesson that Bulwer does fro m a > companion

flower?" Avarice , remember Avhen the Cowslip ' s gold Lured and yet lost its glitter in thy grasp . Do thy hoards glad thee more than those of old ? Those Avither'd in thy clasp . From these thy clasp falls palsied . —It was then That thou wert rich—thy coffers are a lie ; Alas ! poor foolJoy is the wealth of men ,

, And Care their penury . " At least , we shall find it so in the great clay of the Master ' s reckoning Avith His stewards , Avhen we shall Avistfully strain after these words of condemnation of His : — " Inasmuch as ye did unto one of the least of these , ye did it unto Me !" This raising up of the lowly and apparently insignificant bids us look loAver , as perhaps consider it , in Nature ' s kingdom , in order that AVO may take note of the Great find

Artificer ' s hand being over all His Avorks , small as Avell as great . Doing this , ; that whilst the beautiful aud sweet-scented p lants are putting forth their flowers , evcu , the humble grasses are coming into bloom . On earth-topped walls , thin-soiled rocks , ; and even on thatch , the little white-flowered Whitlow-grass is everywhere abundant . The broad-leaved Wood-rush , with its hair-covered leaves , in copses ; and the H ave tail Cotton-grass , Avhich in summer time adorns the wild moorland Avith its balk o ' woolly down , are also now in blossom . As AVC have said , these may escape the eye of th

“The Masonic Magazine: 1878-03-01, Page 22” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 23 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01031878/page/22/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
Monthly Masonic Summary. Article 1
AN HERMETIC WORK. Article 2
PAPERS ON THE GREAT PYRAMID. Article 6
WHAT MATTER? Article 13
THE ADVENTURES OF DON PASQUALE. Article 14
EXTRACTS FROM THE MINUTE BOOKS OF THE CARMARTHEN LODGE. Article 16
"WOUNDED." Article 18
THE WORK OF NATURE IN THE MONTHS. Article 19
AMABEL VAUGHAN.* Article 25
ALEXANDER PUSCHKIN. Article 27
THE ANGEL. Article 28
WHAT HAST THOU TO DO WITH MY POOR NAME ? Article 29
I LOVED THEE. Article 30
AN ELEGY. Article 30
A HEART. Article 30
THE ORIGIN AND REFERENCES OF THE HERMESIAN SPURIOUS FREEMASONRY. Article 31
FREEMASONS' WIVES. Article 33
ON THE TESTING AND STRENGTH OF RAILWAY MATERIALS, &c. Article 34
THE TRUE HISTORY OF FREEMASONRY IN ENGLAND. Article 38
LOST AND SAVED ; OR NELLIE POWERS THE MISSIONARY'S DAUGHTER. Article 41
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE AND ART. Article 44
A STORY OF CHINESE LOVE. Article 48
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

The Work Of Nature In The Months.

Now sweet , now sad , are the p ictures the Yiolet conjures up" Even noAV , what affections the violet awakes ! ' ' says Campbell ; Avhilst Sir Edward Buhver Ly tton , in his " Corn Plowers , " asks : — ' ' Who that has loved knows not the tender tale Which flowers revealwhen lips are coy to tell ?

, Whose youth has passed not , dreaming in the vale Where the rathe Violets dAvell ? ******** Brief-lived first flowers—first love ? the hours steal on To prank the world in summer ' s pomp of hue , But Avhat can flaunt beneath a fiercer sun Worth Avhat we lose in you ?

Oft by a floiver , a leaf , in some loved book We mark the lines that charm us most ;—retrace Thy life—recall its loveliest passage;—look , Dead Violets keep the place !" To Eliza Cook ' s Avarin heart they told another story : — " 'Twas on a day in early spring . Before the butterfly took wing ;

******* A tiny boy with pallid face , Stood in the city ' s thickest place ; His limbs were lank as limbs could be , His tattered garments sad to see ; A basket on his arm he bore , Which gave to sight a little store Of Violets in bunches spread ,

Fresh gathered from their native bed . Their perfume scarcely lived at all , Their purple heads were very small , Their leaves were pinched and shrivelled in , Their stalks were turning dry and thin . 'Twas very , very cold spring weather , And Boy and FloAvers seemed starved together . " Need we say that she goes on to read us the same lesson that Bulwer does fro m a > companion

flower?" Avarice , remember Avhen the Cowslip ' s gold Lured and yet lost its glitter in thy grasp . Do thy hoards glad thee more than those of old ? Those Avither'd in thy clasp . From these thy clasp falls palsied . —It was then That thou wert rich—thy coffers are a lie ; Alas ! poor foolJoy is the wealth of men ,

, And Care their penury . " At least , we shall find it so in the great clay of the Master ' s reckoning Avith His stewards , Avhen we shall Avistfully strain after these words of condemnation of His : — " Inasmuch as ye did unto one of the least of these , ye did it unto Me !" This raising up of the lowly and apparently insignificant bids us look loAver , as perhaps consider it , in Nature ' s kingdom , in order that AVO may take note of the Great find

Artificer ' s hand being over all His Avorks , small as Avell as great . Doing this , ; that whilst the beautiful aud sweet-scented p lants are putting forth their flowers , evcu , the humble grasses are coming into bloom . On earth-topped walls , thin-soiled rocks , ; and even on thatch , the little white-flowered Whitlow-grass is everywhere abundant . The broad-leaved Wood-rush , with its hair-covered leaves , in copses ; and the H ave tail Cotton-grass , Avhich in summer time adorns the wild moorland Avith its balk o ' woolly down , are also now in blossom . As AVC have said , these may escape the eye of th

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