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  • March 1, 1856
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, March 1, 1856: Page 2

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can hope , though but few know how to act ; and happiness , as Swift remarked , is only the perpetual condition of being well deceived . The schoolboy pictures manhood , without rods or tasks ; the maiden loves not the actual personification of , but the nearest resemblance to , the hero of her dream , and sighs , she hardly knows why , at each discovery of some new discrepancy between the faulty living one and

the perfect ideal . Individuals in each walk of life change their condition to some fancied state of redolent ease and plenty , until old age , like the foot of Alnaschar , trips up the ricketty foundation of our prosperity , and we start at discovering ourselves bankrupts in time , who in fancy had revelled in an eternity of youth . Nevertheless , as to universal endowment , without distinction of class or sex , fiction , like the air we breathe , is open to the use or abuse of all .

Yet it has its decided benefits , this activity of imagery , if duly restrained , so that men may be said to be even deceived into wholesome energy , and swallow the bitter medicine of this world ' s wretchedness under cover of an illusory sweetness furnished by imagination . We do our duty , indeed , when we picture to youth the disappointments , vexations , and deceitfulness of man , in order

to lead the mind ' s aspirations to a higher sphere ; but as to the benefit resulting to the world , it is indeed well that the vivacity of Telemachus rejects the chill aphorisms of Mentor . Instil thoroughly into a young man ' s heart the very incorporation of the old man ' s experience , and farewell to the exertion which draws all its energy from the vain expectation that the world will reward it , and to the

bold flights of talented ambition whose soarings stimulate the march of mind , and yet whose pinions are buoyed up by the vapouring hope , that merit is sure to triumph over envy , and that distinction follows desert necessarily in the world ' s allotment of prizes . By-andby is time enough for the aspirant to discover that the world is not

just— -meanwhile , let the racer run the course ; but do not damp him yet , by the information that in all probability the guerdon he desires will be given to another , for if you did this , he would never run at all , and mankind would stagnate in a torpitude of hopeless apathy and a sullen weariness of inactive discontent .

There is also , besides the stimulus which imagination gives to mental energy , a self-protective influence which , under such principle , the mind acquires : we mean in the corroboration of its self-esteem . This is a panoply against public opinion , the variety

of circumstance , and , in many cases , even the pressure of corporeal infirmity , —that straw which so often throws down the giant ! Let a man possess true self-esteem , and the sneer of the envious , the adulation of the sycophant , are equally powerless to molest or perturb him . But here we must define : self-esteem must not be confounded

with conceit , for the latter is synonymous with vanity , and the former with pride . Pride results from the estimate set by a man upon his own judgment ; vanity from the estimate he sets npon the judgment of the world : and hence the truth of the dictum , that " a really proud man is too proud to be vain ; " in other words , his self-estimate

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1856-03-01, Page 2” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 25 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/frm_01031856/page/2/.
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Title Category Page
FICTION AND FACT. Article 1
NOTES OF A YACHT'S CRUISE TO BALAKLAVA. Article 4
SECEET POISONS. Article 10
CASE OF THE CARNATIC STIPENDIARIES. Article 14
SATURDAY HALF-HOLIDAYS, AND THE BETTER OBSERVANCE OF THE LORD'S DAY. Article 15
ADDRESS Article 17
TO THE EDITOR 0£ THE FREEMASONS MAGAZINE. Article 24
REVIEWS OF NEW BOOKS. Article 26
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 34
THE BOYS' SCHOOL. Article 35
PROVINCIAL GRAND OFFICERS. Article 36
GRAND LODGE OF CANADA. Article 36
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 39
METROPOLITAN. Article 39
INSTRUCTION. Article 48
PROVINCIAL. Article 49
ROYAL ABCH. Article 65
THE MARK DEGREE. Article 68
THE ANCIENT AND ACCEPTED RITE. Article 68
KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. Article 68
SCOTLAND Article 69
FRANCE. Article 70
PRUSSIA. Article 70
COLONIAL. Article 71
INDIA. Article 71
AMERICA. Article 73
SUMMARY OF NEWS FOR FEBRUARY. Article 74
0bituary. Article 77
NOTICE. Article 79
TO COEEESPONDENTS. Article 79
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Untitled Article

can hope , though but few know how to act ; and happiness , as Swift remarked , is only the perpetual condition of being well deceived . The schoolboy pictures manhood , without rods or tasks ; the maiden loves not the actual personification of , but the nearest resemblance to , the hero of her dream , and sighs , she hardly knows why , at each discovery of some new discrepancy between the faulty living one and

the perfect ideal . Individuals in each walk of life change their condition to some fancied state of redolent ease and plenty , until old age , like the foot of Alnaschar , trips up the ricketty foundation of our prosperity , and we start at discovering ourselves bankrupts in time , who in fancy had revelled in an eternity of youth . Nevertheless , as to universal endowment , without distinction of class or sex , fiction , like the air we breathe , is open to the use or abuse of all .

Yet it has its decided benefits , this activity of imagery , if duly restrained , so that men may be said to be even deceived into wholesome energy , and swallow the bitter medicine of this world ' s wretchedness under cover of an illusory sweetness furnished by imagination . We do our duty , indeed , when we picture to youth the disappointments , vexations , and deceitfulness of man , in order

to lead the mind ' s aspirations to a higher sphere ; but as to the benefit resulting to the world , it is indeed well that the vivacity of Telemachus rejects the chill aphorisms of Mentor . Instil thoroughly into a young man ' s heart the very incorporation of the old man ' s experience , and farewell to the exertion which draws all its energy from the vain expectation that the world will reward it , and to the

bold flights of talented ambition whose soarings stimulate the march of mind , and yet whose pinions are buoyed up by the vapouring hope , that merit is sure to triumph over envy , and that distinction follows desert necessarily in the world ' s allotment of prizes . By-andby is time enough for the aspirant to discover that the world is not

just— -meanwhile , let the racer run the course ; but do not damp him yet , by the information that in all probability the guerdon he desires will be given to another , for if you did this , he would never run at all , and mankind would stagnate in a torpitude of hopeless apathy and a sullen weariness of inactive discontent .

There is also , besides the stimulus which imagination gives to mental energy , a self-protective influence which , under such principle , the mind acquires : we mean in the corroboration of its self-esteem . This is a panoply against public opinion , the variety

of circumstance , and , in many cases , even the pressure of corporeal infirmity , —that straw which so often throws down the giant ! Let a man possess true self-esteem , and the sneer of the envious , the adulation of the sycophant , are equally powerless to molest or perturb him . But here we must define : self-esteem must not be confounded

with conceit , for the latter is synonymous with vanity , and the former with pride . Pride results from the estimate set by a man upon his own judgment ; vanity from the estimate he sets npon the judgment of the world : and hence the truth of the dictum , that " a really proud man is too proud to be vain ; " in other words , his self-estimate

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