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  • The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine
  • July 1, 1855
  • Page 5
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, July 1, 1855: Page 5

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

Untitled Article

But increase of commercial enterprise does not , of necessity , secure national progress ; for it does not always tend to real good , nor to the induction of the highest moral motive , hence does not " ennoble" the individual by elevation in the only worthy rank , viz ., honest , upright men . Nay , it puts forth evils peculiarly parasitical to itself , as selfishness , imprudence , & c , and , like a child with cards , piles a

precarious tower , whose very altitude threatens its stability . To acquire is not to retain . Bees labour vastly , and amass stores ; yet , when the majority of them are absent , these fall easily before the wasp . Again , it induces avarice—the father , by speculation , of imprudence , whence sprang ruin ; or the descent of the last from the original ancestor—commercial enterprise—may be traced , through

refinement wedded to indolence , whence sprang luxury , who married imprudence , mother to ruin . Here we have the pedigree on both sides , and no Newmarket lineage—the surest descent our age can boast of—could produce a clearer ! Such are a few of the counterfeits of progress ; but the last consists not in these , though it should possess their good without their evil

tendencies ; whilst so closely does the false resemble the real , that with the history of past nations before us , we should exercise extraordinary vigilance over the use of terms we employ in respect of this subject , lest poison may lurk within the flower . With the rapid influx of prosperity and aggrandizement , we view their aspects with some anxiety as to their ennobling issues . We rejoice , therefore , at the increase of Masonry ; for its proper application is a searching cure to the concomitant evils of which we treat , if it observe closely the

simple self-subserviency to the behests of the Great Supreme , which constitutes its surest excellence . Selfishness and neglect of others , under the specious pretext of prudence , find no home in its broad , expansive breast ; power is narrowly inspected , and knowledge also , to ascertain whether their bases be in responsibility and moral principle ; whilst intellect , encouraged to its loftiest flight after truth in the regions of art and science , is never permitted to soar beyond the horizon of religion—that canopy of genuine genius , nor out of the sight of humility—the ground of all the virtues . We

unhesitatingly affirm , that the more Freemasons are inhabitants of a country , the safer and the higher in the scale of progress that country is , if they maintain the moral singleness of purpose which has survived the shock of empires , and , like Ararat , was the rock on which pale science found a footing from the deluge of barbaric invasion . Associated by the closest ties of patriotism , with all the influences of kindred and affinity , its sons will be the defenders of their

country ' s freedom , without slavish fear , or venal adulation of any , or restricted charity to each brother amongst men ; intellect will adorn its Lodges , and thence diffuse a genial light to increase the gleam of civilization ; and the spread of progress in its purest sense , individual and national , will run parallel with the growth of a Fraternity founded upon the sublime precept ., " Love as Brethren , " and rendering " all honour to God alone ! "

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1855-07-01, Page 5” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 23 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_01071855/page/5/.
  • 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.

Untitled Article

But increase of commercial enterprise does not , of necessity , secure national progress ; for it does not always tend to real good , nor to the induction of the highest moral motive , hence does not " ennoble" the individual by elevation in the only worthy rank , viz ., honest , upright men . Nay , it puts forth evils peculiarly parasitical to itself , as selfishness , imprudence , & c , and , like a child with cards , piles a

precarious tower , whose very altitude threatens its stability . To acquire is not to retain . Bees labour vastly , and amass stores ; yet , when the majority of them are absent , these fall easily before the wasp . Again , it induces avarice—the father , by speculation , of imprudence , whence sprang ruin ; or the descent of the last from the original ancestor—commercial enterprise—may be traced , through

refinement wedded to indolence , whence sprang luxury , who married imprudence , mother to ruin . Here we have the pedigree on both sides , and no Newmarket lineage—the surest descent our age can boast of—could produce a clearer ! Such are a few of the counterfeits of progress ; but the last consists not in these , though it should possess their good without their evil

tendencies ; whilst so closely does the false resemble the real , that with the history of past nations before us , we should exercise extraordinary vigilance over the use of terms we employ in respect of this subject , lest poison may lurk within the flower . With the rapid influx of prosperity and aggrandizement , we view their aspects with some anxiety as to their ennobling issues . We rejoice , therefore , at the increase of Masonry ; for its proper application is a searching cure to the concomitant evils of which we treat , if it observe closely the

simple self-subserviency to the behests of the Great Supreme , which constitutes its surest excellence . Selfishness and neglect of others , under the specious pretext of prudence , find no home in its broad , expansive breast ; power is narrowly inspected , and knowledge also , to ascertain whether their bases be in responsibility and moral principle ; whilst intellect , encouraged to its loftiest flight after truth in the regions of art and science , is never permitted to soar beyond the horizon of religion—that canopy of genuine genius , nor out of the sight of humility—the ground of all the virtues . We

unhesitatingly affirm , that the more Freemasons are inhabitants of a country , the safer and the higher in the scale of progress that country is , if they maintain the moral singleness of purpose which has survived the shock of empires , and , like Ararat , was the rock on which pale science found a footing from the deluge of barbaric invasion . Associated by the closest ties of patriotism , with all the influences of kindred and affinity , its sons will be the defenders of their

country ' s freedom , without slavish fear , or venal adulation of any , or restricted charity to each brother amongst men ; intellect will adorn its Lodges , and thence diffuse a genial light to increase the gleam of civilization ; and the spread of progress in its purest sense , individual and national , will run parallel with the growth of a Fraternity founded upon the sublime precept ., " Love as Brethren , " and rendering " all honour to God alone ! "

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