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  • June 1, 1875
  • Page 33
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The Masonic Magazine, June 1, 1875: Page 33

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    Article UNCERTAINTY. ← Page 2 of 2
    Article Review. Page 1 of 3 →
Page 33

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

Uncertainty.

Uncertain as a fitful dream Are fortune , fame and power , AVhose holloAV honours flaunt and gleam And fade each passing hour ; Uncertain every human scheme , But thou , immortal flower , Shalt bloom throughout eternity !

The soul knows no uncertainty , Tho' rude Time ' s tempests loAver . When Time itself its race hath run , And o ' er our earth shall fall No more the sheen of star or sun , —

Blind ruin spreads its pall—Thou , seraph sold , lov'd , lingering one , Shalt spurn life ' s hated thrall ; Exultant and eternally Triumphant o'er uncertainty , Where spirit voices call . Voice of Masonry , A meriea

Review.

Review .

( Continued from page 350 J The Death of JEgeus , and other Poems . By W . H . A . Emra . London : Samuel Tinsely . The principal poem is a dramatic one ; the persons represented being . ZEgeus

, King of Athens ; a merchant , a fisherman , a messenger from Theseus ; Theseus , son of iEgeus ; and the chorus of Athenian old men . The Avhole scenery is laid upon and near to Mount Sunium ; and Mr . Emra has succeeded in giving freshness to

an old-world story , and is evidently a man of fine classical tastes . The piece opens with the chorus before the tent of yEgeus , on the summit of the Attican promontory : —

" Rise , young dayshine , over the sea , And the glimmering earth , Rouse the Avhite birds on the soaring cliff , Till they shriek in their mirth ; And bring fresh life to the waking Avorld With thy purple birth . "

The dream of iEgeus , as told by himself to the chorus , is poAverfully written : — " Now listen to the things I dream'd , Just ere your voices Avoke me . Round me raged The storm ' s full fury ; yet me thought I stood Onthiswind-lash'dandpathlesspreci p ice ,

Unheeding of the rain Avhich dash'd around , Unheeding of the fury of the blast , Unheeding of all things except the line Of yon far-off horizon , kindled , up Into a long Avhite streak of living fire Each fitful moment . Suddenly , a p mse , ¦

A hush ; the wild storm slept , and all was dark , And then there came again a gust of Avind That sent a shivering through my aged limbs

, And dash'd me to the cliff . There , Avhile I clung With clench'd hands grasping at the rooted tufts , A forked flash lit up the black abyss ; And as it play'd upon the distant wave ,

I saw—ye gods ! do I not speak the truth ?—I saw the doom-ship on that distant Avave , Black-sail'd , death-freighted , — -and beside my ear , With heaven ' s loud-crashing thunders intermixt ,

Some voice Avas hissing , — ' Fool , that lov ' st a son , He was , for whom thou Avatchest . Death is kind To thee ; thou shalt not live to feed thy Avoe

With all the store of past-day memories , And thoughts of bold Avords aud of bolder deeds . But yet to join him in the Hades gloom , To link love-arms together , and to crown His shadoAvy broAvs with tAvisted asphodel , And hear a faint voice call thee once

again " Oh , father , father ! " that alone is thine ! Go , fool , and join him . ' Then me . thought a grasp Was on me—unresisting , forward bent , Prone o ' er the summit of the rock I fell ; And as I fellonce more the flashes lit

, The wild cliff , and the Avild birds shriek'd with fear To see me falling , and I shriek'd and woke . "

The scene between the fisherman and the chorus is a fine one : — " FISHERMAN . My news is for the king , Not for such dotard ears as yours to hear . CHORUS . Fine are thy words ; but we are here , his guards . BB

“The Masonic Magazine: 1875-06-01, Page 33” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 8 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01061875/page/33/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
Monthly Masonic Summary. Article 1
ODE ON THE INSTALLATION OF H.R.H. THE PRINCE OF WALES, Article 2
OUR ENGLISH FREEMASONRY. Article 3
ORIGIN AND BEAUTY OF MASONIC SYMBOLISM. Article 4
RESPONSE OF THE PILGRIM. Article 10
MURIEL HALSIE Article 11
DR. DASSIGNY'S ENQUIRY. Article 16
THE PROGBESSING MASON Article 21
MASONIC REQUIEM. Article 21
NOTES ON THE CHIVALRIC ORDERS OF THE TEMPLE AND OF MALTA, IN CANADA. Article 21
ASSYRIAN DISCOVERIES. Article 24
THE INSTALLATION OF THE PRINCE OF WALES. Article 26
RELIEF. Article 27
"ERADICATION OF ERROR." Article 30
UNCERTAINTY. Article 32
Review. Article 33
THE DYING CHILD. Article 35
MASONRY v. ANTI-MASONRY. Article 36
THE PALACE OF THE QUEEN OF SHEBA. Article 37
A CHINESE SOLOMON. Article 38
CROWN THE SACRED HILL. Article 39
A VERY LAMENTABLE LAMENTATION. Article 39
A FEW EXTRACTS FROM A RELATIVE NATURAL HISTORY. Article 40
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Uncertainty.

Uncertain as a fitful dream Are fortune , fame and power , AVhose holloAV honours flaunt and gleam And fade each passing hour ; Uncertain every human scheme , But thou , immortal flower , Shalt bloom throughout eternity !

The soul knows no uncertainty , Tho' rude Time ' s tempests loAver . When Time itself its race hath run , And o ' er our earth shall fall No more the sheen of star or sun , —

Blind ruin spreads its pall—Thou , seraph sold , lov'd , lingering one , Shalt spurn life ' s hated thrall ; Exultant and eternally Triumphant o'er uncertainty , Where spirit voices call . Voice of Masonry , A meriea

Review.

Review .

( Continued from page 350 J The Death of JEgeus , and other Poems . By W . H . A . Emra . London : Samuel Tinsely . The principal poem is a dramatic one ; the persons represented being . ZEgeus

, King of Athens ; a merchant , a fisherman , a messenger from Theseus ; Theseus , son of iEgeus ; and the chorus of Athenian old men . The Avhole scenery is laid upon and near to Mount Sunium ; and Mr . Emra has succeeded in giving freshness to

an old-world story , and is evidently a man of fine classical tastes . The piece opens with the chorus before the tent of yEgeus , on the summit of the Attican promontory : —

" Rise , young dayshine , over the sea , And the glimmering earth , Rouse the Avhite birds on the soaring cliff , Till they shriek in their mirth ; And bring fresh life to the waking Avorld With thy purple birth . "

The dream of iEgeus , as told by himself to the chorus , is poAverfully written : — " Now listen to the things I dream'd , Just ere your voices Avoke me . Round me raged The storm ' s full fury ; yet me thought I stood Onthiswind-lash'dandpathlesspreci p ice ,

Unheeding of the rain Avhich dash'd around , Unheeding of the fury of the blast , Unheeding of all things except the line Of yon far-off horizon , kindled , up Into a long Avhite streak of living fire Each fitful moment . Suddenly , a p mse , ¦

A hush ; the wild storm slept , and all was dark , And then there came again a gust of Avind That sent a shivering through my aged limbs

, And dash'd me to the cliff . There , Avhile I clung With clench'd hands grasping at the rooted tufts , A forked flash lit up the black abyss ; And as it play'd upon the distant wave ,

I saw—ye gods ! do I not speak the truth ?—I saw the doom-ship on that distant Avave , Black-sail'd , death-freighted , — -and beside my ear , With heaven ' s loud-crashing thunders intermixt ,

Some voice Avas hissing , — ' Fool , that lov ' st a son , He was , for whom thou Avatchest . Death is kind To thee ; thou shalt not live to feed thy Avoe

With all the store of past-day memories , And thoughts of bold Avords aud of bolder deeds . But yet to join him in the Hades gloom , To link love-arms together , and to crown His shadoAvy broAvs with tAvisted asphodel , And hear a faint voice call thee once

again " Oh , father , father ! " that alone is thine ! Go , fool , and join him . ' Then me . thought a grasp Was on me—unresisting , forward bent , Prone o ' er the summit of the rock I fell ; And as I fellonce more the flashes lit

, The wild cliff , and the Avild birds shriek'd with fear To see me falling , and I shriek'd and woke . "

The scene between the fisherman and the chorus is a fine one : — " FISHERMAN . My news is for the king , Not for such dotard ears as yours to hear . CHORUS . Fine are thy words ; but we are here , his guards . BB

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