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  • The Masonic Magazine
  • Nov. 1, 1875
  • Page 24
  • SHADOWS.
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The Masonic Magazine, Nov. 1, 1875: Page 24

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    Article CONTEMPORARY LETTERS ON THE FRENCH REVOLUTION. Page 1 of 4 →
Page 24

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

Shadows.

day , as without them we wencl on our way , with hushed voices , and often faltering steps , to that far and shadowy land which lies beyond the " silent sea . " A ucl if there are times in every life of ours when these shadows fall in startling vividnessor in solemn pathos over its

, stern reality , over the broad way of business , profit , toil , trouble , nay , even pleasure , surely , even though they be but " shadows " they should have , as they are meant to have , a living and quickening influence on us all . AVhen the voice is mute , Avhen the

heart is heavy , when fading one by one , are the soft visions of the " silvery land , " when experience has but its own bitter and soft humiliating tale to tell , how good it is , if how chastening for us all , to linger amid that shadow-clime once more .

How soothing and yet how refreshing is it , to re-people the busy scene of to-day with the dear familiar faces of the long-buried dead , to rekindle the smile of old affection , to bow before the domestic shrine once

more , long since sadly shattered to its base , to live amid those loved and loving shadows of the past , in engrossing reverie by day , in tender visions of the night . It seems but as yesterday we were standing side by side , to start sr > joyously together

in the rapid race of life , that we were what we are not now , in all the freshness of early trust , that we were clasping hands and interchanging vows , with those whose unwithered memory and unfaded grace alone can move our cold and callous sympathies

to-day . Ah ! that was " amici et sodales , " a joyous time for you and for me , ere we had bridged over the intervening distance between the aspirations of youth and the realizations of maturity , ere change aud

chance and separation and sorrow , like the Harpies at the feast , had spoiled our viands , and driven us both famished and lamenting away . Hail then to thee , thou Shadow-land ! Welcome , most welcome , are those thy

shadows ' which dim the full sunshine of later , of busier , of more prosperous years , which take us from the present to the past , which surround with the fascination of awakened memory , ivith the moving retrospect of things that once Avere , yet never here can be more , the outer and inner life of our daily sojourning . Perhaps , thus far , with these my shadowy

Shadows.

fancies , some of the friendly readers of the Masonic Magazine may have been inclined somewhat to sympathize , nay , may have kindly borne with so vagrant an imagination , and may have resolved to read on even to the end , if then to sec these , like

all other " shallows , " assuredly fleet away . AV . ( To be continued . )

Contemporary Letters On The French Revolution.

CONTEMPORARY LETTERS ON THE FRENCH REVOLUTION .

Letter II . THIS letter is believed to be of February , 15 th , but as the date is missing , it is printed here , though whether quite correct in order is not clear . Ed .

Supposed date , Feb . lo , 1790 . No particular event has occurred since my last which has altered the situation of the capital , or that of the principal actors . Alfcho' I never heard on what ground 100 was supposed to be merely an intriguante

, be assured that the aristocratic party have that opinion of her , and are firmly convinced jealousy of 1 G and personal fears are one of the greatest obstacles they encounter .

Everything convinces me that the storm is approaching . 133 assured me it would not be loug before it burst . I have every reason to be of bis opinion . All the aristocrats are daily stealing off one by one , and the few that remain are preparing to follow their examplebut to what quarter

, of the horizon to look for the black specs I know not . Your Hamburg friend says it must be from Germany ; you will best know if there is power or inclination in that quarter . The Assembly are certainly daily losing

ground , but I doubt whether the people are not yet firm to them—firm to them , not from affection , but because they look upon the present state of affairs as assuring them that violent anarchy , ivhich nothing but force or extreme misery will

induce them to renounce ; yet Normandy is universally aristocratic . I know not ivho conducts at Turin , but I think there is some danger from the report of all the young noblemen who once Avere the companions of his sole

“The Masonic Magazine: 1875-11-01, Page 24” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 10 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01111875/page/24/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
Monthly Masonic Summary. Article 2
RANDOM RECOLLECTIONS OF FOREIGN TRAVEL. Article 3
TO LOIS. Article 7
THE DUVENGER CURSE Article 7
THE BADGE OF INNOCENCE." Article 10
LIGHTS AND SHADOWS OF SCOTTISH FREEMASONRY. Article 14
ODE. Article 16
THE ORIGIN AND REFERENCES OF THE HERMESIAN SPURIOUS FREEMASONRY. Article 18
SHADOWS. Article 22
CONTEMPORARY LETTERS ON THE FRENCH REVOLUTION. Article 24
NARRATIVE OF AN UNRECORDED ARCTIC EXPEDITION. Article 27
Our Archaeological Corner. Article 28
THE ATTACK OF THE CHURCH OF ROME ON FREEMASONS AND FREEMASONRY. Article 29
THE MYSTIC TEMPLE. Article 33
Review. Article 34
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE AND ART. Article 35
THE ETRUSCAN LANGUAGE Article 38
SONNET. Article 40
THE FAMILY GHOST. Article 40
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Shadows.

day , as without them we wencl on our way , with hushed voices , and often faltering steps , to that far and shadowy land which lies beyond the " silent sea . " A ucl if there are times in every life of ours when these shadows fall in startling vividnessor in solemn pathos over its

, stern reality , over the broad way of business , profit , toil , trouble , nay , even pleasure , surely , even though they be but " shadows " they should have , as they are meant to have , a living and quickening influence on us all . AVhen the voice is mute , Avhen the

heart is heavy , when fading one by one , are the soft visions of the " silvery land , " when experience has but its own bitter and soft humiliating tale to tell , how good it is , if how chastening for us all , to linger amid that shadow-clime once more .

How soothing and yet how refreshing is it , to re-people the busy scene of to-day with the dear familiar faces of the long-buried dead , to rekindle the smile of old affection , to bow before the domestic shrine once

more , long since sadly shattered to its base , to live amid those loved and loving shadows of the past , in engrossing reverie by day , in tender visions of the night . It seems but as yesterday we were standing side by side , to start sr > joyously together

in the rapid race of life , that we were what we are not now , in all the freshness of early trust , that we were clasping hands and interchanging vows , with those whose unwithered memory and unfaded grace alone can move our cold and callous sympathies

to-day . Ah ! that was " amici et sodales , " a joyous time for you and for me , ere we had bridged over the intervening distance between the aspirations of youth and the realizations of maturity , ere change aud

chance and separation and sorrow , like the Harpies at the feast , had spoiled our viands , and driven us both famished and lamenting away . Hail then to thee , thou Shadow-land ! Welcome , most welcome , are those thy

shadows ' which dim the full sunshine of later , of busier , of more prosperous years , which take us from the present to the past , which surround with the fascination of awakened memory , ivith the moving retrospect of things that once Avere , yet never here can be more , the outer and inner life of our daily sojourning . Perhaps , thus far , with these my shadowy

Shadows.

fancies , some of the friendly readers of the Masonic Magazine may have been inclined somewhat to sympathize , nay , may have kindly borne with so vagrant an imagination , and may have resolved to read on even to the end , if then to sec these , like

all other " shallows , " assuredly fleet away . AV . ( To be continued . )

Contemporary Letters On The French Revolution.

CONTEMPORARY LETTERS ON THE FRENCH REVOLUTION .

Letter II . THIS letter is believed to be of February , 15 th , but as the date is missing , it is printed here , though whether quite correct in order is not clear . Ed .

Supposed date , Feb . lo , 1790 . No particular event has occurred since my last which has altered the situation of the capital , or that of the principal actors . Alfcho' I never heard on what ground 100 was supposed to be merely an intriguante

, be assured that the aristocratic party have that opinion of her , and are firmly convinced jealousy of 1 G and personal fears are one of the greatest obstacles they encounter .

Everything convinces me that the storm is approaching . 133 assured me it would not be loug before it burst . I have every reason to be of bis opinion . All the aristocrats are daily stealing off one by one , and the few that remain are preparing to follow their examplebut to what quarter

, of the horizon to look for the black specs I know not . Your Hamburg friend says it must be from Germany ; you will best know if there is power or inclination in that quarter . The Assembly are certainly daily losing

ground , but I doubt whether the people are not yet firm to them—firm to them , not from affection , but because they look upon the present state of affairs as assuring them that violent anarchy , ivhich nothing but force or extreme misery will

induce them to renounce ; yet Normandy is universally aristocratic . I know not ivho conducts at Turin , but I think there is some danger from the report of all the young noblemen who once Avere the companions of his sole

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