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  • March 1, 1856
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, March 1, 1856: Page 3

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is so high as to ignore altogether the judgment of others upon him . Now , it is evident that this pride may arise from fancied as well % s from real excellence , by a species of hypochondriasis , and many an ermined Herod , or political Sejanus . considers himself spotless and

unimpeachable by a monomania more fixed and destructive than that which characterizes him who imagines himself a teapot , or who consumes his life in endeavouring to reconcile his two legs , one of which is a stanch Protestant , whilst the other , he is convinced , favours the Bishop of Exeter .

Yet if in alluding to the consolations of imagination , our readers think we would encourage the habit of ideal rumination , our purport will be misconceived . By no mental process does the intellect more surely commit suicide than by the indulgence of visionary fabrication , and " castles in the air" cost their builder a greater outlay from the resources of his mind , than even solid bricks and mortar

draw from the revenues of his pocket . Such warblings of fancy are not only transitory , but deceptive ; they steal from us the treasure of a lifetime , and , like ivy , conceal from self-scrutiny the mind ' s insidious decay ; lull us , like the Danite in the harlot's lap , to the enervating sleep of indolent satisfaction with mistaken powers , until , when the Philistines of care and real want threaten us , we start up

and find our boasted strength is gone ! In intellect , as m moral excellence , satisfaction with the present as the ultimate end of our aspirations , certainly checks further progress ; yet also , since the mind cannot be quiescent , to pause is to retrograde , and contented acquirement is the sign of mental as of moral decline . Hence it is , that if left wholly to imagination , we should be like madmen

crying— 61 Seas of milk and skips of amber ! "St . Giles' and St . James' would change places for the more appropriate precincts of Bedlam and St . Luke's ; and the human war which

is carried on at such fearful odds , at present , between knaves and dupes , would terminate in the overwhelming increase of the latter . Fortunately , " Imagination and we are not all one ; but we have , " as Lord Shaftesbury powerfully expresses it , " a person left within , who has power to correct the appearances and redress the imagination . "

It is evident then , that though in some cases fiction and ideal may be consolatory , and , in their deceptive promises of results , even encouraging , yet , being false , their influence must be evanescent , fitful , and destructive . Sane and beneficial exertion must have two

constitutive elements , —it must aim at the truest good , and it must proceed by the purest way . Observe the purest , that is , the way most in accordance to the Bible , a book which admits neither flattery nor imposture , which ignores policy whore the latter wars with honesty , and does not allow even a statesman to have two consciences , one for

Grod and another for the State . The stimulus to progress drawn by man from himself , in his contemplation of this scene of woe and worthlessness , must be of necessity ephemeral and inefficient , so

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1856-03-01, Page 3” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 23 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/frm_01031856/page/3/.
  • List
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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

is so high as to ignore altogether the judgment of others upon him . Now , it is evident that this pride may arise from fancied as well % s from real excellence , by a species of hypochondriasis , and many an ermined Herod , or political Sejanus . considers himself spotless and

unimpeachable by a monomania more fixed and destructive than that which characterizes him who imagines himself a teapot , or who consumes his life in endeavouring to reconcile his two legs , one of which is a stanch Protestant , whilst the other , he is convinced , favours the Bishop of Exeter .

Yet if in alluding to the consolations of imagination , our readers think we would encourage the habit of ideal rumination , our purport will be misconceived . By no mental process does the intellect more surely commit suicide than by the indulgence of visionary fabrication , and " castles in the air" cost their builder a greater outlay from the resources of his mind , than even solid bricks and mortar

draw from the revenues of his pocket . Such warblings of fancy are not only transitory , but deceptive ; they steal from us the treasure of a lifetime , and , like ivy , conceal from self-scrutiny the mind ' s insidious decay ; lull us , like the Danite in the harlot's lap , to the enervating sleep of indolent satisfaction with mistaken powers , until , when the Philistines of care and real want threaten us , we start up

and find our boasted strength is gone ! In intellect , as m moral excellence , satisfaction with the present as the ultimate end of our aspirations , certainly checks further progress ; yet also , since the mind cannot be quiescent , to pause is to retrograde , and contented acquirement is the sign of mental as of moral decline . Hence it is , that if left wholly to imagination , we should be like madmen

crying— 61 Seas of milk and skips of amber ! "St . Giles' and St . James' would change places for the more appropriate precincts of Bedlam and St . Luke's ; and the human war which

is carried on at such fearful odds , at present , between knaves and dupes , would terminate in the overwhelming increase of the latter . Fortunately , " Imagination and we are not all one ; but we have , " as Lord Shaftesbury powerfully expresses it , " a person left within , who has power to correct the appearances and redress the imagination . "

It is evident then , that though in some cases fiction and ideal may be consolatory , and , in their deceptive promises of results , even encouraging , yet , being false , their influence must be evanescent , fitful , and destructive . Sane and beneficial exertion must have two

constitutive elements , —it must aim at the truest good , and it must proceed by the purest way . Observe the purest , that is , the way most in accordance to the Bible , a book which admits neither flattery nor imposture , which ignores policy whore the latter wars with honesty , and does not allow even a statesman to have two consciences , one for

Grod and another for the State . The stimulus to progress drawn by man from himself , in his contemplation of this scene of woe and worthlessness , must be of necessity ephemeral and inefficient , so

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