Skip to main content
Museum of Freemasonry

Masonic Periodicals Online

  • Explore
  • Advanced Search
  • Home
  • Explore
  • The Masonic Magazine
  • Dec. 1, 1876
  • Page 72
  • AN ESSAY ON EPITAPHS.
Current:

The Masonic Magazine, Dec. 1, 1876: Page 72

  • Back to The Masonic Magazine, Dec. 1, 1876
  • Print image
  • Articles/Ads
    Article AN ESSAY ON EPITAPHS. ← Page 2 of 4 →
Page 72

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

An Essay On Epitaphs.

effect as the observation of his life . Those Ep itap hs are therefore the most perfect which set virtue in the strongest lig ht , and are best adapted to exalt the reader ' s ideas and rouse his emulation . To this end it is not always necessary

to recount the actions of a hero or enumerate the writings of a p hilosopher ; to imag ine such informations necessary is to detract from their characters , or to suppose their works mortal or their achievements in clanger of being forgotten . The bare

name of such men- answers every purpose of a long inscription . Had only the name of Sir Isaac Newton been subjoined to the design upon his monument , instead of a long detail of his

discoveries , which no philosopher can want , and which none but a philosopher can understand , those by whose direction it was raised , had clone more honour both to him and to themselves . This indeed is a commendation which it

requires no genius to bestow , ' but which eau never become vulgar or contemptible , if bestowed with judgment , because no siugle age produces many men of merit superior to panegyric . None but the first names can stand unassisted against the

attacks of time , and if men raised to reputation by accident or caprice have nothing but their names engraved on their tombs , there is clanger lest m a few years the inscription require an interpreter .

Thus have their expectations been disappointed who honoured Picus of B'lirandola with this pompous epitaph : Hie situs est Picus Mirandola , ctetera norunt Et Tagus et Gangesforsan et

Anti-, podes . His name , then celebrated in the remotest corners of the earth , is now almost forgotten , and his works , then studied , admired and applauded , are now mouldering in obscurity .

Next in dignity to the bare name is a short character , simple and unadorned , without exaggeration , superlatives , or rhetoric . Such were the inscriptions in l , se among the Romans , in which the victories gained by their emperors were eorauiemoratecl by a single epithet , as ^ assar Germanicus , Caasar Dacicus ,

Germanicus , Illyricus . Such would be this epitaph , Isaacus Newtonus , natural legibus investigatis , hie quiescit . But to far the greatest part of mankind a longer encomium is necessary for the publication of their virtues and the preservation of their memories , and in the comnosition of these it is that art is

principally required , and precepts therefore may be useful . In writing Epitaphs one circumstance is to be considered , which affects no other composition ; the place in which they are now commonly found restrains them to a particular air of solemnity , and debars

them from the admission of all li ghter or gayer ornaments . In this it is that the style' of an Epitaph necessarily differs from that of an elegy . The custom of burying our dead either in or near churches perhaps originally founded on a rational

design of fitting the mind for religious exercises , by laying before it the most affecting j > roofs of the uncertainty of life , makes it proper to exclude from our Epitaphs all such allusions as are contrary to the doctrines for the propagation of

which the churches are erected , and to the end for which those who peruse the monuments must be supposed to come thither . Nothing is therefore more ridiculous than to copy the Roman

inscriptions , which were engraven on stones by the highway and composed by those who generally reflected on mortalit y only to excite in themselves and others a quicker relish of pleasnre and a more luxurious enjoyment of life , and whose

regard for the dead extended no farther than a wish that the earth mi ght be light upon them . All allusions to the heathen mythology are therefore absurd , and all regard for the senseless remains of a dead man

impertinent and superstitious . One of the first distinctions of the primitive Christians was their neglect of bestowing garlands on the dead , in which they are very rationally defended by their apologist in Minutius Felix . "We lavish no flowers nor odours

on the dead , " says he , " because they have no sense of fragrance or of beauty . " We profess to reverence the dead , not for their sake , but for our own . It is therefore always with indignation or contempt that I read the epitaph on Cowley , a man

“The Masonic Magazine: 1876-12-01, Page 72” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 11 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01121876/page/72/.
  • List
  • Grid
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
Page 1

Page 1

1 Article
Page 2

Page 2

1 Article
Page 3

Page 3

1 Article
Page 4

Page 4

1 Article
Page 5

Page 5

1 Article
Page 6

Page 6

1 Article
Page 7

Page 7

1 Article
Page 8

Page 8

1 Article
Page 9

Page 9

1 Article
Page 10

Page 10

1 Article
Page 11

Page 11

1 Article
Page 12

Page 12

3 Articles
Page 13

Page 13

1 Article
Page 14

Page 14

1 Article
Page 15

Page 15

1 Article
Page 16

Page 16

3 Articles
Page 17

Page 17

1 Article
Page 18

Page 18

3 Articles
Page 19

Page 19

1 Article
Page 20

Page 20

1 Article
Page 21

Page 21

1 Article
Page 22

Page 22

3 Articles
Page 23

Page 23

1 Article
Page 24

Page 24

3 Articles
Page 25

Page 25

1 Article
Page 26

Page 26

2 Articles
Page 27

Page 27

1 Article
Page 28

Page 28

1 Article
Page 29

Page 29

1 Article
Page 30

Page 30

2 Articles
Page 31

Page 31

1 Article
Page 32

Page 32

3 Articles
Page 33

Page 33

1 Article
Page 34

Page 34

1 Article
Page 35

Page 35

2 Articles
Page 36

Page 36

1 Article
Page 37

Page 37

2 Articles
Page 38

Page 38

1 Article
Page 39

Page 39

3 Articles
Page 40

Page 40

1 Article
Page 41

Page 41

3 Articles
Page 42

Page 42

1 Article
Page 43

Page 43

1 Article
Page 44

Page 44

1 Article
Page 45

Page 45

4 Articles
Page 46

Page 46

1 Article
Page 47

Page 47

1 Article
Page 48

Page 48

1 Article
Page 49

Page 49

3 Articles
Page 50

Page 50

2 Articles
Page 51

Page 51

3 Articles
Page 52

Page 52

1 Article
Page 53

Page 53

1 Article
Page 54

Page 54

2 Articles
Page 55

Page 55

1 Article
Page 56

Page 56

1 Article
Page 57

Page 57

1 Article
Page 58

Page 58

1 Article
Page 59

Page 59

3 Articles
Page 60

Page 60

1 Article
Page 61

Page 61

1 Article
Page 62

Page 62

1 Article
Page 63

Page 63

1 Article
Page 64

Page 64

1 Article
Page 65

Page 65

4 Articles
Page 66

Page 66

1 Article
Page 67

Page 67

1 Article
Page 68

Page 68

1 Article
Page 69

Page 69

1 Article
Page 70

Page 70

3 Articles
Page 71

Page 71

3 Articles
Page 72

Page 72

1 Article
Page 73

Page 73

1 Article
Page 74

Page 74

3 Articles
Page 75

Page 75

3 Articles
Page 76

Page 76

3 Articles
Page 77

Page 77

2 Articles
Page 78

Page 78

1 Article
Page 79

Page 79

1 Article
Page 80

Page 80

1 Article
Page 81

Page 81

3 Articles
Page 82

Page 82

1 Article
Page 83

Page 83

1 Article
Page 84

Page 84

1 Article
Page 85

Page 85

3 Articles
Page 86

Page 86

2 Articles
Page 87

Page 87

1 Article
Page 88

Page 88

1 Article
Page 89

Page 89

1 Article
Page 90

Page 90

1 Article
Page 91

Page 91

1 Article
Page 92

Page 92

1 Article
Page 93

Page 93

4 Articles
Page 94

Page 94

1 Article
Page 95

Page 95

1 Article
Page 96

Page 96

1 Article
Page 97

Page 97

3 Articles
Page 72

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

An Essay On Epitaphs.

effect as the observation of his life . Those Ep itap hs are therefore the most perfect which set virtue in the strongest lig ht , and are best adapted to exalt the reader ' s ideas and rouse his emulation . To this end it is not always necessary

to recount the actions of a hero or enumerate the writings of a p hilosopher ; to imag ine such informations necessary is to detract from their characters , or to suppose their works mortal or their achievements in clanger of being forgotten . The bare

name of such men- answers every purpose of a long inscription . Had only the name of Sir Isaac Newton been subjoined to the design upon his monument , instead of a long detail of his

discoveries , which no philosopher can want , and which none but a philosopher can understand , those by whose direction it was raised , had clone more honour both to him and to themselves . This indeed is a commendation which it

requires no genius to bestow , ' but which eau never become vulgar or contemptible , if bestowed with judgment , because no siugle age produces many men of merit superior to panegyric . None but the first names can stand unassisted against the

attacks of time , and if men raised to reputation by accident or caprice have nothing but their names engraved on their tombs , there is clanger lest m a few years the inscription require an interpreter .

Thus have their expectations been disappointed who honoured Picus of B'lirandola with this pompous epitaph : Hie situs est Picus Mirandola , ctetera norunt Et Tagus et Gangesforsan et

Anti-, podes . His name , then celebrated in the remotest corners of the earth , is now almost forgotten , and his works , then studied , admired and applauded , are now mouldering in obscurity .

Next in dignity to the bare name is a short character , simple and unadorned , without exaggeration , superlatives , or rhetoric . Such were the inscriptions in l , se among the Romans , in which the victories gained by their emperors were eorauiemoratecl by a single epithet , as ^ assar Germanicus , Caasar Dacicus ,

Germanicus , Illyricus . Such would be this epitaph , Isaacus Newtonus , natural legibus investigatis , hie quiescit . But to far the greatest part of mankind a longer encomium is necessary for the publication of their virtues and the preservation of their memories , and in the comnosition of these it is that art is

principally required , and precepts therefore may be useful . In writing Epitaphs one circumstance is to be considered , which affects no other composition ; the place in which they are now commonly found restrains them to a particular air of solemnity , and debars

them from the admission of all li ghter or gayer ornaments . In this it is that the style' of an Epitaph necessarily differs from that of an elegy . The custom of burying our dead either in or near churches perhaps originally founded on a rational

design of fitting the mind for religious exercises , by laying before it the most affecting j > roofs of the uncertainty of life , makes it proper to exclude from our Epitaphs all such allusions as are contrary to the doctrines for the propagation of

which the churches are erected , and to the end for which those who peruse the monuments must be supposed to come thither . Nothing is therefore more ridiculous than to copy the Roman

inscriptions , which were engraven on stones by the highway and composed by those who generally reflected on mortalit y only to excite in themselves and others a quicker relish of pleasnre and a more luxurious enjoyment of life , and whose

regard for the dead extended no farther than a wish that the earth mi ght be light upon them . All allusions to the heathen mythology are therefore absurd , and all regard for the senseless remains of a dead man

impertinent and superstitious . One of the first distinctions of the primitive Christians was their neglect of bestowing garlands on the dead , in which they are very rationally defended by their apologist in Minutius Felix . "We lavish no flowers nor odours

on the dead , " says he , " because they have no sense of fragrance or of beauty . " We profess to reverence the dead , not for their sake , but for our own . It is therefore always with indignation or contempt that I read the epitaph on Cowley , a man

  • Prev page
  • 1
  • 71
  • You're on page72
  • 73
  • 97
  • Next page
  • Accredited Museum Designated Outstanding Collection
  • LIBRARY AND MUSEUM CHARITABLE TRUST OF THE UNITED GRAND LODGE OF ENGLAND REGISTERED CHARITY NUMBER 1058497 / ALL RIGHTS RESERVED © 2025

  • Accessibility statement

  • Designed, developed, and maintained by King's Digital Lab

We use cookies to track usage and preferences.

Privacy & cookie policy