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  • The Masonic Magazine
  • Oct. 1, 1879
  • Page 20
  • WITHIN THE SHADOW OF THE SHAFT.
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The Masonic Magazine, Oct. 1, 1879: Page 20

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Page 20

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

Within The Shadow Of The Shaft.

WITHIN THE SHADOW OF THE SHAFT .

With Illustrations by the Authoi ( Concluded from page 114 . J

BY BRO . SAMUEL POINTER , P . M . AND TREASURER , BURGOYNE , NO . 902 ; P . M . ATHEMU 3 I , NO . 1491 . " Nor could thy fabric , Paul ! defend thee long , Though thou wert sacred to thy Maker ' s praise ; Though made immortal by a poet's song , And poets' songs the Theban walls could raise .

" The daring flames peep'd in and saw from far The awful beauties of the sacred quire ; But , since it was profaned by civil war , Heaven thought it fit to have it purged by fire . "

—Dryden . —Annus Mirabilis . £ T is very true that the 5 public demanded a victim , and it might not have been possible , with reference to

- " the excited state of the popular feeling and the ? safety of the community , to have interposed between the citizens and their self-sacrificing prey :

and here it may be convenient to examine whether the cockneys had any just or reasonable s ^^ ground for the ap-*^ 35 prehensions which

WUfZ undoubtedly the vast f & " ] majority of them en's : ;'' ' tertained . rSf : ' :-. Hubert ' s story was /] \ l , that he was hired in Jj . Holland to come to

< - " ' England on his ejfgs . wicked exploit . Now , W § % were , as is well - ~ * known , at war both ; & . with Holland and bgLj . France then and

, W @ S people always lend ppf ready ears to the tales ^^ of the machinations of their enemies . But there is another

circumstance , to which I think historians have not given sufficient prominence , that , to my mind , goes very far in justifying the inhabitants of the metropolitan city in their expressed ajiprehensioiis that the calamity was occasioned b y design rather than by accident ,

“The Masonic Magazine: 1879-10-01, Page 20” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 8 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01101879/page/20/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
A LECTURE. Article 1
SOME NOTES CONCERNING A DORMANT LODGE ON THE SCOTTISH BORDER. Article 4
BEATRICE. Article 10
ODE SACREE A L'ETERNEL. Article 12
SACRED ODE TO THE ETERNAL. Article 13
MASONIC AND ANTI-MASONIC PROCESSIONS, CARICATURES, ETC. Article 16
HONESTY AND TRUTH. Article 19
WITHIN THE SHADOW OF THE SHAFT. Article 20
THE GOLDEN WREATH. Article 28
A VISIT TO THE ENGLISH LAKES. Article 30
THE CURATE'S LAY. Article 35
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART. Article 36
ON AN OGAM INSCRIPTION. Article 38
A CATALOGUE OF MASONIC BOOKS IN THE BRITISH MUSEUM. Article 39
THE DIDOT SALE. Article 44
GOD KNOWS THE BEST Article 48
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Page 20

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

Within The Shadow Of The Shaft.

WITHIN THE SHADOW OF THE SHAFT .

With Illustrations by the Authoi ( Concluded from page 114 . J

BY BRO . SAMUEL POINTER , P . M . AND TREASURER , BURGOYNE , NO . 902 ; P . M . ATHEMU 3 I , NO . 1491 . " Nor could thy fabric , Paul ! defend thee long , Though thou wert sacred to thy Maker ' s praise ; Though made immortal by a poet's song , And poets' songs the Theban walls could raise .

" The daring flames peep'd in and saw from far The awful beauties of the sacred quire ; But , since it was profaned by civil war , Heaven thought it fit to have it purged by fire . "

—Dryden . —Annus Mirabilis . £ T is very true that the 5 public demanded a victim , and it might not have been possible , with reference to

- " the excited state of the popular feeling and the ? safety of the community , to have interposed between the citizens and their self-sacrificing prey :

and here it may be convenient to examine whether the cockneys had any just or reasonable s ^^ ground for the ap-*^ 35 prehensions which

WUfZ undoubtedly the vast f & " ] majority of them en's : ;'' ' tertained . rSf : ' :-. Hubert ' s story was /] \ l , that he was hired in Jj . Holland to come to

< - " ' England on his ejfgs . wicked exploit . Now , W § % were , as is well - ~ * known , at war both ; & . with Holland and bgLj . France then and

, W @ S people always lend ppf ready ears to the tales ^^ of the machinations of their enemies . But there is another

circumstance , to which I think historians have not given sufficient prominence , that , to my mind , goes very far in justifying the inhabitants of the metropolitan city in their expressed ajiprehensioiis that the calamity was occasioned b y design rather than by accident ,

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