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  • July 1, 1855
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, July 1, 1855: Page 1

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Page 1

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

Progress.

PKOGBESS .

The age , like some of its scientific sons , runs wild upon the use of certain terms which tickle the ear , and by proffering to the sense a plausible-looking argument , distract the thoughts from investigating its value . Every man has his particular verbal hobby of magniloquent mystification ; for instance , what surgeon would announce to a jury that his patient had received a black eye , and would not rather

describe the injury as a hypopium , developing much sanguineous extravasation about the ophthalmic epidermis ? What young gardener , newly promoted from a hedgerow , would sacrifice his position by calling a dandelion other than by the botanical term " leontodon , " to the stupefaction of nursemaids and the perplexity of schoolboys ? Indeed , as to botany , the " rabies verborum" has so spread as to induce a doubt whether , if Solomon himself , who " spake of " that science , from the hyssop on the wall to the cedar which grew upon Lebanon , had walked arm-in-arm through the Crystal Palace with Nbrroy , king of arms , during the late horticultural exhibition ,

both would not have been considerably at a nonplus to recognise the humble families of honeysuckle and Clarke , under the hybrid association—plant and man upon one stalk— " of caprifolium , polycotyledonum Clarkii ? " Imagine these ancient worthies or the progenitors of the said Mr , Clarke , gazing upon this singular production as identifying their descendant ? Doubtless they would imagine that in the changes which had passed over the world since their time , humanity had reverted to its nristine mud . and was iust aeuin nuttin g

forth its embryo vitality in the shape of vegetation as its first stage , so that the botanist should absolutely be represented by a rhododendron , the astronomer by a sunflower—stay , we are wrong—an helianthus—an ancient spinster by a sensitive plant , or mimosa pudica , and the areca or cabbage-tree , embrace with its parental petals the cross-legged family of merchant tailors ! vol . i . 3 a

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1855-07-01, Page 1” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 23 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_01071855/page/1/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
ART. Article 40
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 41
LODGES OF INSTRUCTION Article 60
ST. MARTIN'S HALL, LONG ACRE. Article 39
A FLIGHT. Article 25
A POETICAL ANSWER IS REQUESTED TO THE FOLLOWING ENIGMA. Article 26
APHORISMATA MASONICA. Article 27
REVIEWS OF NEW BOOKS. Article 28
masonic songs-no. 1. Article 37
ON HEARING A LITTLE CHILD SAY THE LORD'S PRAYER. Article 37
MUSIC. Article 38
SPECULATIVE RAMBLES AMONGST THE STARS. Article 15
TRAVELS BY A FREEMASON. Article 20
PROGRESS. Article 1
NOTES ON ANTIQUARIAN RESEARCH. Article 9
NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 43
MASONIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 43
METROPOLITAN Article 44
PROVINCIAL Article 45
FRANCE. Article 57
GERMANY. Article 57
COLONIAL Article 59
NOTICE. Article 63
METROPOLITAN LODGE MEETINGS FOR JULY. Article 60
CHAPTERS OF INSTRUCTION Article 61
Obituary Article 62
LIFE AND DEATH. Article 62
NEW POSTAL REGULATIONS. Article 63
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 63
ERRATUM. Article 64
ANIMAL AND HUMAN INSTINCT. Article 6
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Progress.

PKOGBESS .

The age , like some of its scientific sons , runs wild upon the use of certain terms which tickle the ear , and by proffering to the sense a plausible-looking argument , distract the thoughts from investigating its value . Every man has his particular verbal hobby of magniloquent mystification ; for instance , what surgeon would announce to a jury that his patient had received a black eye , and would not rather

describe the injury as a hypopium , developing much sanguineous extravasation about the ophthalmic epidermis ? What young gardener , newly promoted from a hedgerow , would sacrifice his position by calling a dandelion other than by the botanical term " leontodon , " to the stupefaction of nursemaids and the perplexity of schoolboys ? Indeed , as to botany , the " rabies verborum" has so spread as to induce a doubt whether , if Solomon himself , who " spake of " that science , from the hyssop on the wall to the cedar which grew upon Lebanon , had walked arm-in-arm through the Crystal Palace with Nbrroy , king of arms , during the late horticultural exhibition ,

both would not have been considerably at a nonplus to recognise the humble families of honeysuckle and Clarke , under the hybrid association—plant and man upon one stalk— " of caprifolium , polycotyledonum Clarkii ? " Imagine these ancient worthies or the progenitors of the said Mr , Clarke , gazing upon this singular production as identifying their descendant ? Doubtless they would imagine that in the changes which had passed over the world since their time , humanity had reverted to its nristine mud . and was iust aeuin nuttin g

forth its embryo vitality in the shape of vegetation as its first stage , so that the botanist should absolutely be represented by a rhododendron , the astronomer by a sunflower—stay , we are wrong—an helianthus—an ancient spinster by a sensitive plant , or mimosa pudica , and the areca or cabbage-tree , embrace with its parental petals the cross-legged family of merchant tailors ! vol . i . 3 a

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