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  • The Masonic Magazine
  • Dec. 1, 1876
  • Page 71
  • AN ESSAY ON EPITAPHS.
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The Masonic Magazine, Dec. 1, 1876: Page 71

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Page 71

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

Lost.

That every fair and gracious thing I loved and lost is but a sting ; Another thorn thy memory , My little darling , bring to me . But kindly night doth pity pain : In all my dreams she comes again

; Her precious head is on my breast ; My happy arms caress her rest ; I hoar her words of tender glee ; My little darling kisses mo . Ah ! sweet is night—too sweet , too brief—When day recalls our bitterest grief ,

The hungry heart , the longing dire , That burns the soul with vain desire , The ancient cry of wild distress , The Rachel-mourning , comfortless , 0 God ! once more that face to see ! My little darling , come to me ! Rose Terry Cooke in Harper ' s Magazine

An Essay On Epitaphs.

AN ESSAY ON EPITAPHS .

WE take this remarkably interesting paper from a collection of Dr . Johnson ' s works , as we feel certain that it will commend itself alike to the taste of the archaologist and the feelings of the Freemason . It originally appeared in the " Gentlemen ' s Magazine , " in 1740 .

Though criticism has been cultivated in every age of learning , by men of great abilities and extensive knowledge , till the rules of writing are become rather burdensome than instructive to the mind !

though almost every species of composition has been the subject of particular treatises , and given birth to definitions , distinctions , precepts , and illustrations ; yet no critic of note that has fallen within my observation has hitherto thought sepulchral inscriptions worthy of a minute

examination , or pointed out with proper accuracy their beauties and defects . The reasons of this neglect it is useless to inquire , and perhaps impossible to discover ; it might be justly expected that this kind of writing would have been the

favourite topic of criticism , aud that selflove might have produced some regard for it , in those authors that have crowded libraries with elaborate dissertations upon

An Essay On Epitaphs.

Homer . Since to afford a subject for heroic poems is the privilege of very fe-w but every man may expect to be recorded ' in an epitaph , and therefore finds some interest in providing that his memory may not suffer by an unskilful

panegyric . If our prejudices in favour of antiquity deserve to have any part in the regulation of our studies , Epitaphs seem entitled to more than common regard , as they are probably of the same age with the art of

writing . The most ancient structures in the world , the Pyramids , are supposed to be sepulchral monuments , which either pride or gratitude erected , and the same passions which incited men to such laborious and expensive methods of

preserving their own memory or that of their benefactors , would doubtless incline them not to neglect any easier means by which the same ends might be obtained . Nature and reason have directed to every nation that to preserve good actions from oblivion

is both the interest and duty of mankind , and therefore we find no people acquainted with the use of letters that omitted to grace the tombs of their heroes and wise

men with panegyrical inscriptions . To examine , therefore , in what the perfection of Epitaphs consists , and what rules are to be observed in composing them , will be at least of as much use as other critical inquiries , and for assigning

a few hours to such disquisitions great examples at least , if not strong reasons , may be pleaded . An epitaph , as the word itself implies , is an inscription on a tomb , and in its most extensive import may admit

indiscriminately satire or praise . But as malice has seldom produced monuments of defamation , and the tombs hitherto raised have been the work of friendship and benevolence , custom has contracted the original latitude of the wordso that it

, signifies in the general acceptation , an inscription engraven on a tomb in honour of the person deceased . As honours are paid to the dead in order to incite others to the imitation of their excellenciesthe principal intention of

, epitaphs is to perpetuate the examples of virtue , that the tomb of a good man may supply the want of his presence , and veneration for his memory produce the same

“The Masonic Magazine: 1876-12-01, Page 71” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 11 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01121876/page/71/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
Monthly Masonic Sumnary. Article 2
SOME FURTHER REMARKS ON THE EXTRACTS FROM THE SHEFFIELD CHAPTER OF PARADISE MINUTE BOOKS.* Article 3
FATHER FOY ON SECRET SOCIETIES. Article 5
PRINCE BOLTIKOFF: Article 12
A VOICE IN NATURE. Article 16
"THE ALBURY MS."AN ANALYSIS. Article 18
AN OLD, OLD STORY. Article 22
TWO SIDES. Article 24
SOCIAL PROBLEMS AND THEIR PEACEFUL SOLUTION. Article 26
THE WOMEN OF OUR TIME. Article 30
GERARD MONTAGU; Article 32
THE ENCHANTED ISLE OF THE SEA. Article 35
CONTEMPORARY LETTERS ON THE FRENCH REVOLUTION. Article 37
LOVE YOUR NEIGHBOUR. Article 39
RETURN OF THE ARCTIC EXPEDITION. Article 40
A MEMORY. Article 41
DURHAM CATHEDRAL. Article 42
TRIFLES. Article 45
OLD GREGORY'S GHOST: Article 45
FURNESS ABBEY. Article 49
THE DAYS TO COME. Article 50
GRUMBLE NOT, BROTHER. Article 51
THE ORIGIN AND REFERENCES OF THE HERMESIAN SPURIOUS FREEMASONRY. Article 51
A Review. Article 54
FREEMASONRY! Article 59
POETS' CORNER. Article 59
PARIS RESTAURANTS. Article 63
MASONIC CENTENNIAL SONG. Article 65
THE MASONIC PHILOSOPHY. Article 65
FREEMASONRY IN FRANCE. Article 67
LOST. Article 70
AN ESSAY ON EPITAPHS. Article 71
A PARABLE. Article 74
ADDRESS OF P.G.M. BRO. HON. RICHARD VAUX, AT CENTENNIAL OF AMERICAN UNION LODGE. Article 75
SHORT IS THE WAY. Article 76
ADDRESS OF THE GRAND MASTER, J. H. GRAHAM, L.L.D., &c. Article 77
A PAGE FROM LIFE'S BOOK. Article 81
Correspondence. Article 82
REUNION. Article 85
ADDRESS OF THE V. H. AND E. SIR KT. COL. W. J. B. MACLEOD MOORE, OF THE GRAND CROSS OF THE TEMPLE, GRAND PRIOR OF THE DOMINION OF CANADA, Article 86
MASONRY EVERYWHERE. Article 93
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE AND ART. Article 93
ARE THE CHILDREN AT HOME. Article 97
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Lost.

That every fair and gracious thing I loved and lost is but a sting ; Another thorn thy memory , My little darling , bring to me . But kindly night doth pity pain : In all my dreams she comes again

; Her precious head is on my breast ; My happy arms caress her rest ; I hoar her words of tender glee ; My little darling kisses mo . Ah ! sweet is night—too sweet , too brief—When day recalls our bitterest grief ,

The hungry heart , the longing dire , That burns the soul with vain desire , The ancient cry of wild distress , The Rachel-mourning , comfortless , 0 God ! once more that face to see ! My little darling , come to me ! Rose Terry Cooke in Harper ' s Magazine

An Essay On Epitaphs.

AN ESSAY ON EPITAPHS .

WE take this remarkably interesting paper from a collection of Dr . Johnson ' s works , as we feel certain that it will commend itself alike to the taste of the archaologist and the feelings of the Freemason . It originally appeared in the " Gentlemen ' s Magazine , " in 1740 .

Though criticism has been cultivated in every age of learning , by men of great abilities and extensive knowledge , till the rules of writing are become rather burdensome than instructive to the mind !

though almost every species of composition has been the subject of particular treatises , and given birth to definitions , distinctions , precepts , and illustrations ; yet no critic of note that has fallen within my observation has hitherto thought sepulchral inscriptions worthy of a minute

examination , or pointed out with proper accuracy their beauties and defects . The reasons of this neglect it is useless to inquire , and perhaps impossible to discover ; it might be justly expected that this kind of writing would have been the

favourite topic of criticism , aud that selflove might have produced some regard for it , in those authors that have crowded libraries with elaborate dissertations upon

An Essay On Epitaphs.

Homer . Since to afford a subject for heroic poems is the privilege of very fe-w but every man may expect to be recorded ' in an epitaph , and therefore finds some interest in providing that his memory may not suffer by an unskilful

panegyric . If our prejudices in favour of antiquity deserve to have any part in the regulation of our studies , Epitaphs seem entitled to more than common regard , as they are probably of the same age with the art of

writing . The most ancient structures in the world , the Pyramids , are supposed to be sepulchral monuments , which either pride or gratitude erected , and the same passions which incited men to such laborious and expensive methods of

preserving their own memory or that of their benefactors , would doubtless incline them not to neglect any easier means by which the same ends might be obtained . Nature and reason have directed to every nation that to preserve good actions from oblivion

is both the interest and duty of mankind , and therefore we find no people acquainted with the use of letters that omitted to grace the tombs of their heroes and wise

men with panegyrical inscriptions . To examine , therefore , in what the perfection of Epitaphs consists , and what rules are to be observed in composing them , will be at least of as much use as other critical inquiries , and for assigning

a few hours to such disquisitions great examples at least , if not strong reasons , may be pleaded . An epitaph , as the word itself implies , is an inscription on a tomb , and in its most extensive import may admit

indiscriminately satire or praise . But as malice has seldom produced monuments of defamation , and the tombs hitherto raised have been the work of friendship and benevolence , custom has contracted the original latitude of the wordso that it

, signifies in the general acceptation , an inscription engraven on a tomb in honour of the person deceased . As honours are paid to the dead in order to incite others to the imitation of their excellenciesthe principal intention of

, epitaphs is to perpetuate the examples of virtue , that the tomb of a good man may supply the want of his presence , and veneration for his memory produce the same

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