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  • Nov. 1, 1873
  • Page 6
  • FREEMASONRY IN GERMANY.
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The Masonic Magazine, Nov. 1, 1873: Page 6

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

A Monologue.

A MONOLOGUE .

How strange is Life , we must confess ! It wears for us a fancy dress , And ' mid its glittering masquerade , The gifts which fail , the hopes which fade , We iind full oft how in this scene , AH is—as if it ne ' er had been .

The dreams of Youth , the fears of Age ; The fleeting tales of Life ' s quaint page ; Soft visions and our fancies dear ; "Warm friends , who droop and disappear ; The colder face , the changing hour , The faded leaves , the withered bower ; Those memories which linger still Amid our passing good and ill ;—All these like shadows on our way , Greet ns in altered mien each day .

Old Time has come in measur'd pace , With faltering limbs and wrinkled face , To bring its tale of joy and woe , The smiles and tears <__ '' long ago ; ' ' To drown our laughter in its si ghs , To fill fond faith with sad surprise ; For by its spell how changed appeal's The picture of these passing years .

The brighter tints arc gone—no more They charm us , as they did of yore ; Nor can our fancy e ' en retouch Those faded hues we loved so much . The picture we once thought so fair , Whose warmth and grate we deem'd so rare , Seems clouded with a darker hue And all confused to the view .

And yet for us who mourn to-day , As wending slowly on our way , The present seems to disappear With the calm flow of each new year , For all Hint Time has rent or riven , For all that Life has lent or given , "Wh y should we ever here complain For all that now seems pass'd or vain ? Such is our life—and this to be ! We know is its Epitome .

In vain are then our long regrets , The grief which daily , hourly frets ; In vain are tears , in vain are sighs , In vain is doubt , in vain surprise , Tor all we deem so sad and sore Has so befallen evermore . And as the world in ages long Goes on its way , the same sad song Of mingled doubt and startled fear Is chanted by each waning year ,

How idle then for ns to trust In aught of human hope or dust . ' On all the Destroyer ' s hand is seen , On what is now , on what has been , And naught here we can hope to save From the dim secret of the grave .

Yet let us not in idle strain Or mourning words , in doubt arrain-n That wondrous rule of Love below Man ' s life can ever truly shoiv :

For tho' to us 'tis sad to part With much we prize , and in our heart We mourn with many silent tears Thro' lengthen'd hours , weary years , Some old dear hope , some fond , fond dream , Which like a star upon Life ' s stream , Could lead uswith its pleasant ray

, , In hope and trust along our way ; And tho' on our sad pathway now , With weakened Crane and colder hrow , We knov no more the happy reign Of those bri ght and fairy days again , F \> r the sovereign of our heart and will Is no longer here to rule us still , Nor underneath that gentle sway

We leant all loving to obey ; Yet still we feel that such must be The sight we all must hourly sec , And we leave our doubt and calm our fears , Impassioned cries and falling tears , To share in faith ' s untroubled trust " Such is ( he way of all our dust , "

And in that loving hope to rest" Whatever is , is for the best . " "W .

Freemasonry In Germany.

FREEMASONRY IN GERMANY .

BY BfiO . J . a . FKDEL , Author of the "Jlistory of Freemasonry , " and Honorary Grand Master of Prince Hall Grand Lodye of Boston , & c . The fraternity in general , and that of

Germany in particular , has sustained a deplorable loss in the demise of Bro . Dr . Th . Schletter , Professor in Leipsic , editor of the Freemasons' Gazette and of Lalomia ; for in him the craft loses one of the most lished and best

accomp informed brethren . Bro . Dr . 0 . Iienne-Am-Ehyn , author of a History of Civilization , has succeeded him 'in the editorship of the Freemasons' Gazelle .

The number of German lodges has within the kst few mouths increased in a gratifying manner by the foundation and opening of new lodges at Strasburg , " Kehl , Gollnow , Naples , Augsburg and Municli , of which the last three are

especialty deserving of notice . On the lodges "zux Kett-e" at Munich , and "Augusta" at Augsburg devolves the difficult , but honourable task , in the very camp of Jesuitism and intellectual blindness , to lift the torch of Masonic

light , and by faithful work gradually to repulse the implacable enemy of progress , enlightenment and toleration ;

“The Masonic Magazine: 1873-11-01, Page 6” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 23 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01111873/page/6/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
Monthly Masonic Summary. Article 1
MASONIC ARCHAEOLOGY, No. 2. Article 2
A MONOLOGUE. Article 6
FREEMASONRY IN GERMANY. Article 6
NEW IDEAS AND NOVEL DEGREES. Article 16
ANCIENT ACCEPTED RITE. Article 17
CURIOUS OLD ATTACK ON FREEMASONRY. Article 20
MS. MASONIC CONSTITUTIONS (OR CHARGES) No. 3. Article 25
Review. Article 27
WHAT NON-MASONS SAY OF US. Article 29
ORIGIN OF MASONRY, AND ITS GENERAL ADVANTAGES. Article 31
SONG. Article 31
BROTHERLY LOVE, RELIEF AND TRUTH. Article 33
PHILLIS. Article 33
FRENCH MASONIC SONG. Article 33
Untitled Ad 34
Untitled Ad 34
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

A Monologue.

A MONOLOGUE .

How strange is Life , we must confess ! It wears for us a fancy dress , And ' mid its glittering masquerade , The gifts which fail , the hopes which fade , We iind full oft how in this scene , AH is—as if it ne ' er had been .

The dreams of Youth , the fears of Age ; The fleeting tales of Life ' s quaint page ; Soft visions and our fancies dear ; "Warm friends , who droop and disappear ; The colder face , the changing hour , The faded leaves , the withered bower ; Those memories which linger still Amid our passing good and ill ;—All these like shadows on our way , Greet ns in altered mien each day .

Old Time has come in measur'd pace , With faltering limbs and wrinkled face , To bring its tale of joy and woe , The smiles and tears <__ '' long ago ; ' ' To drown our laughter in its si ghs , To fill fond faith with sad surprise ; For by its spell how changed appeal's The picture of these passing years .

The brighter tints arc gone—no more They charm us , as they did of yore ; Nor can our fancy e ' en retouch Those faded hues we loved so much . The picture we once thought so fair , Whose warmth and grate we deem'd so rare , Seems clouded with a darker hue And all confused to the view .

And yet for us who mourn to-day , As wending slowly on our way , The present seems to disappear With the calm flow of each new year , For all Hint Time has rent or riven , For all that Life has lent or given , "Wh y should we ever here complain For all that now seems pass'd or vain ? Such is our life—and this to be ! We know is its Epitome .

In vain are then our long regrets , The grief which daily , hourly frets ; In vain are tears , in vain are sighs , In vain is doubt , in vain surprise , Tor all we deem so sad and sore Has so befallen evermore . And as the world in ages long Goes on its way , the same sad song Of mingled doubt and startled fear Is chanted by each waning year ,

How idle then for ns to trust In aught of human hope or dust . ' On all the Destroyer ' s hand is seen , On what is now , on what has been , And naught here we can hope to save From the dim secret of the grave .

Yet let us not in idle strain Or mourning words , in doubt arrain-n That wondrous rule of Love below Man ' s life can ever truly shoiv :

For tho' to us 'tis sad to part With much we prize , and in our heart We mourn with many silent tears Thro' lengthen'd hours , weary years , Some old dear hope , some fond , fond dream , Which like a star upon Life ' s stream , Could lead uswith its pleasant ray

, , In hope and trust along our way ; And tho' on our sad pathway now , With weakened Crane and colder hrow , We knov no more the happy reign Of those bri ght and fairy days again , F \> r the sovereign of our heart and will Is no longer here to rule us still , Nor underneath that gentle sway

We leant all loving to obey ; Yet still we feel that such must be The sight we all must hourly sec , And we leave our doubt and calm our fears , Impassioned cries and falling tears , To share in faith ' s untroubled trust " Such is ( he way of all our dust , "

And in that loving hope to rest" Whatever is , is for the best . " "W .

Freemasonry In Germany.

FREEMASONRY IN GERMANY .

BY BfiO . J . a . FKDEL , Author of the "Jlistory of Freemasonry , " and Honorary Grand Master of Prince Hall Grand Lodye of Boston , & c . The fraternity in general , and that of

Germany in particular , has sustained a deplorable loss in the demise of Bro . Dr . Th . Schletter , Professor in Leipsic , editor of the Freemasons' Gazette and of Lalomia ; for in him the craft loses one of the most lished and best

accomp informed brethren . Bro . Dr . 0 . Iienne-Am-Ehyn , author of a History of Civilization , has succeeded him 'in the editorship of the Freemasons' Gazelle .

The number of German lodges has within the kst few mouths increased in a gratifying manner by the foundation and opening of new lodges at Strasburg , " Kehl , Gollnow , Naples , Augsburg and Municli , of which the last three are

especialty deserving of notice . On the lodges "zux Kett-e" at Munich , and "Augusta" at Augsburg devolves the difficult , but honourable task , in the very camp of Jesuitism and intellectual blindness , to lift the torch of Masonic

light , and by faithful work gradually to repulse the implacable enemy of progress , enlightenment and toleration ;

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