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  • The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine
  • July 1, 1856
  • Page 8
  • THE SIGNS OF ENGLAND;
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, July 1, 1856: Page 8

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    Article THE SIGNS OF ENGLAND; Page 1 of 5 →
Page 8

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

The Signs Of England;

. THE SiaNS OF ENGLAND ;

BY ONE WHO HAS PAINTED MANY . SIGKN" THE riFTH . —THE NEWSPAPERS . Now we do not wish to be misconstrued in what we are going to say . "We are preparing to speak a little truth ; and it will appear

strange when we add , that , however well received at last , the full speaking of it requires a certain caution . People are not prepared for it . It is a special gift to see truth . Every person professes to love it , yet , if we press them closely as to their ideas on it , we shall often find it repudiated in a very extraordinary fashion .

Banking among the wonders of this wonderful time , is the strange influence which an overgrown Newspaper possesses . Why , it would be the work of a week , with the closest attention , to read through a single number of it ! And few of us , except the prosers , who are just the people to yield easily their judgment , have time to inspect more of this broadsheet than the leading article , and the particulars of an

atrocity , or the " extraordinary disclosure" which is forming the towntalk . "We always seize upon the subject which is exciting the public curiosity . We must be up in conversation . The Paper , in other respects , is a sea of information , in which , as we may say , we sadly stand in a need of a buoy whereupon to mount and make ourselves aware of the phases of the view around us . The embarrassment of

rich things , to the curious and to the intelligent , is vexatious . We are overborne by talk—and good talk , to ^>! Somehow or other , the Newspaper has worked itself up to become the complete magister —the undeniable layer down of the law ; and its self-confidence in that which it can bring to pass is every day more and more developed . The public , in its hands , is but in leading-strings—at least , so the Newspaper thinks : that is its policy . It speaks to the hour . It

looks not forward , by its own confession . It must live de die in diem . Thus there never , perhaps , was such a mass of contradiction - —not to be detected in the verbiage—than is presented by two days' numbers , separated by anything like an interval . It hovers between Paul and Barabbas , with a fidgety hand to each , when the people are looking , or not looking— -just according to

circumstances . What , to it , is truth—that truth which is so long of arrival ? Will the paper sell , sir ? That is the point . This is the grand query now asked , east and west . And old Chronos of the newspaper-office looks out of his eyry to see , every morning , which way the hands

of the great clock of public opinion are going round . Two or ten , as the bell strikes , not as by the natural day . lie loves , above all , the gold letters . As for the rest of the political dial , it is all an inside of wire and wooden hammers . If our readers will mark , they will find that the statements of the " Paper " arc put forth in the dictatorial

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1856-07-01, Page 8” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 6 July 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/frm_01071856/page/8/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
ON THE MYSTERIES OF THE EARLY AGES AS CONNECTED WITH RELIGION. Article 1
PRINTERS' ASYLUM. Article 5
AN INCIDENT OF THE ST. LEGER FAMILY. Article 6
THE SIGNS OF ENGLAND; Article 8
MASONRY: Article 12
REVIEWS OF NEW BOOKS. Article 13
ST. ANN'S SCHOOLS, FLORAL FETE, CREMORNE. Article 14
« PASSE." Article 15
MUSIC. Article 16
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 18
THE " MARK " DEGREE. Article 28
THE CHRISTIANITY OF MASONRY. Article 28
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 29
GRAND LODGE. Article 32
ROYAL FREE HOSPITAL, GRAY'SINN ROAD. Article 36
METROPOLITAN. Article 39
INSTRUCTION. Article 41
PROVINCIAL. Article 43
ROYAL ARCH. Article 58
KNIGHTS TEMPI AE. Article 60
SCOTLAND. Article 61
IRELAND. Article 62
INDIA. Article 63
AMERICA. Article 64
HOLLAND. Article 65
SUMMARY OF NEWS FOR JUNE. Article 65
Obituary. Article 70
NOTICE. Article 72
TO COEEESPONDENTS. Article 72
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

The Signs Of England;

. THE SiaNS OF ENGLAND ;

BY ONE WHO HAS PAINTED MANY . SIGKN" THE riFTH . —THE NEWSPAPERS . Now we do not wish to be misconstrued in what we are going to say . "We are preparing to speak a little truth ; and it will appear

strange when we add , that , however well received at last , the full speaking of it requires a certain caution . People are not prepared for it . It is a special gift to see truth . Every person professes to love it , yet , if we press them closely as to their ideas on it , we shall often find it repudiated in a very extraordinary fashion .

Banking among the wonders of this wonderful time , is the strange influence which an overgrown Newspaper possesses . Why , it would be the work of a week , with the closest attention , to read through a single number of it ! And few of us , except the prosers , who are just the people to yield easily their judgment , have time to inspect more of this broadsheet than the leading article , and the particulars of an

atrocity , or the " extraordinary disclosure" which is forming the towntalk . "We always seize upon the subject which is exciting the public curiosity . We must be up in conversation . The Paper , in other respects , is a sea of information , in which , as we may say , we sadly stand in a need of a buoy whereupon to mount and make ourselves aware of the phases of the view around us . The embarrassment of

rich things , to the curious and to the intelligent , is vexatious . We are overborne by talk—and good talk , to ^>! Somehow or other , the Newspaper has worked itself up to become the complete magister —the undeniable layer down of the law ; and its self-confidence in that which it can bring to pass is every day more and more developed . The public , in its hands , is but in leading-strings—at least , so the Newspaper thinks : that is its policy . It speaks to the hour . It

looks not forward , by its own confession . It must live de die in diem . Thus there never , perhaps , was such a mass of contradiction - —not to be detected in the verbiage—than is presented by two days' numbers , separated by anything like an interval . It hovers between Paul and Barabbas , with a fidgety hand to each , when the people are looking , or not looking— -just according to

circumstances . What , to it , is truth—that truth which is so long of arrival ? Will the paper sell , sir ? That is the point . This is the grand query now asked , east and west . And old Chronos of the newspaper-office looks out of his eyry to see , every morning , which way the hands

of the great clock of public opinion are going round . Two or ten , as the bell strikes , not as by the natural day . lie loves , above all , the gold letters . As for the rest of the political dial , it is all an inside of wire and wooden hammers . If our readers will mark , they will find that the statements of the " Paper " arc put forth in the dictatorial

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