279 lines
16 KiB
Plaintext
279 lines
16 KiB
Plaintext
SHORT TALK BULLETIN - Vol.I June, 1923 No.6
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ROBERT BURNS
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by: Unknown
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Freemasonry has no greater name than Robert Burns. If there are those who
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question his investiture as Poet Laureate of the Canongate Kilwinning
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Lodge, owing to the absence of certain documentary evidence, no one denies
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that he was, and is, the greatest poet of Freemasonry, the singer alike of
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its faith and its friendship, its philosophy and its fun, its passion and
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its prophecy. Nay, more; he was the Laureate, of the hopes and dreams of
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the lowly of every land.
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Higher tribute there is none for any man than to say, justly, that the
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world is gentler and more joyous for his having lived; and that may be
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truly said of Robert Burns, whose very name is an emblem of pity, joy, and
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the magnetism of Brotherly Love. It is therefore that men love Burns, as
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much for his weakness as for his strength, and all the more because he was
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such an unveneered human being. It is given to but few men thus to live in
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the hearts of their fellows; and today, from Ayr to Sidney, from Chicago to
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Calcutta, the memory of Burns is not only a fragrance, but a living force
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uniting men of many lands into a fellowship of Liberty Justice and Charity.
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"The Memory of Burns!" cried Emerson, "I am afraid Heaven and earth have
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taken too good care of it to leave anything to say. The west winds are
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murmuring it. Open the windows behind you and hearken to the incoming
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tide, what the waves say of it. The doves perching on the eaves of a stone
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chapel opposite may know something about it. The Memory of Burns - every
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man's, every boy's, every girl's head carries snatches of his songs, and
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they say them by heart; and what is strangest of all, never learned them
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from a book, but from mouth to mouth. They are the property and the solace
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of mankind!"
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In a tiny two-roomed cottage, clay-built and thatch-roofed, on the banks of
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the Doon, in the district of Kyle, two miles south of the town of Ayr, in
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Scotland, Robert Burns was born on January 25th, 1759. It was a peasant
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home, such as he afterward described in "The Cotter's Saturday Night," in
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which poverty was consecrated by piety, where the father was a priest of
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faith and the mother a guardian angel of the holy things of life. So far
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from as schools were concerned, his education was limited to grammar,
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writing and arithmetic. Later he picked up a little Latin, a smattering of
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French, and some knowledge of English and classic poets. But he knew the
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Book of Nature, leaf by leaf, and the strange scroll of the Human Heart, as
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only the swift insight of genius can read them.
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At the age of twenty-two Burns was initiated into the Mysteries of
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Freemasonry, in St. David's Lodge at Tarbolton, July 4th, 1781. Lockhart
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says that he was introduced to the Lodge by John Rankine. The minute
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recording his initiation reads: "Sederunt for July 4th. Robert Burns in
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Lochly was entered an Apprentice. Jo Norman, Master." The second and
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third degrees were conferred on the same evening, in the month of October
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following his initiation. Six years later he was made a Knights Templar as
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well as a Royal Arch Mason in Eyemouth, as under the old Regime the two
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were always given together. By this time he had won some fame as a poet,
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and the higher degrees were given him in token both of his fame as a poet
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and his enthusiasm as a Mason.
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On July 27th, 1784, Burns was elected Depute Master of St. James Lodge,
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Tarbolton, a position which he held until St. John's Day, 1788.
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He was made an honorary member of St. John Lodge No. 22, Kilmarnock, on
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October 26th, 1786. Major William Parker, the Master of St. John Lodge,
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became a great friend of Burns, and subscribed for thirty-five copies of
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the first edition of his poems. He is the "Willie" in the song "Ye Sons of
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Auld Killie" (a contraction of Kilmarnock) composed and sung by Burns on
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the occasion of his admission as an honorary member of St. John Lodge:
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"Ye Sons of Auld Killie, assembled by William,
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To follow the noble vocation;
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Your thrifty old mother has scarce such another,
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To sit in that honored station.
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I've little to say, but only to pray,
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As praying's the ton of your fashion;
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A prayer from the muse, you may well excuse,
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"Tis seldom her favorite passion.
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Ye powers who preside, o're the wind and the tide,
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Who mark each element's border;
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Who formed this frame with beneficent aim,
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Whose sovereign statute is order;
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Within this dear mansion may wayward contention,
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Or withered envy ne're enter;
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May secrecy round be the mystical bound,
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And Brotherly Love be the center.
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The minutes of this meeting concluded as follows:
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"Robert Burns, Poet, from Mauchline, a member of St. James, Tarbolton, was
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made an Honorary Member of this Lodge."
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"(Sgd.) Will Parker.
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This was the first Lodge to distinguish Burns with the designation "Poet,"
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and to honor him with honorary membership.
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Besides being a faithful and enthusiastic attendant upon the meetings of
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his own Lodge, Burns was a frequent visitor at Lodge when away from home.
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It is said that, with a very few exceptions, all his patrons and
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acquaintances were members of the Fraternity.
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Burns is described at this time as nearly five feet ten inches in height,
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and of a form agile as well as strong; his high forehead shaded with black,
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curling hair, his eyes large, dark, full of bright intelligence, his face
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vividly expressive. His careless dress and untaught manners gave an
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impression of coarseness at first, but this was forgotten in the charm of
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his personality, and his face in repose had a calm thoughtfulness akin to
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melancholy. Full of fun and fire, affable and the best of good company,
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his superior mind did not make him supercilious, and he loved more than all
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else, a festival that was half frolic and a feast where joy and good will
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were guests.
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Alas, drinking was a habit in the Scotland of those days, to a degree we
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can hardly imagine, as much in the Church as in the Lodge; and it made the
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bitter tragedy of Robert Burns. Truth obliges us to admit that his moral
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failure was early and pitiful, due alike to his environment and to a fatal
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frailty of which made him fitful, unstable, and a prey to every whim of
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fancy and of passion. It is an awful risk to be endowed with the genius of
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a Burns; it digs deep pitfalls for the man to whom it is given. Yet, if in
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his later years he was a degraded man of genius, he was never a man of
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degraded genius. The poison did not enter his song. Allan Cunningham was
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right when he said: "Few men had so much of the Poet in them, and few
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poets so much of the man; the man was probably less pure than he ought to
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have been, but the poet was pure and bright to the end."
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So, and naturally so, men are willing to hide with a veil of charity the
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debris of character scattered along the starry path of Burns. On reading
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his poems Byron exclaimed: "What an antithetical mind! Tenderness,
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roughness, delicacy, coarseness, sentiments, sensuality; dirt and deity -
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all mixed up in one compound of inspired clay!" But that might pass for a
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description of mankind in general, and of Burns in particular. If Burns
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was a sinner he was in that akin to ourselves, as God knows, a little good
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and a little bad, a little weak and a little strong, foolish when he
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thought he was wise, and wise, often, when he feared he was foolish. So we
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may give Burns the charity which he prayed for others:
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Then at the balance let's be mute,
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We can never adjust it;
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What's done we partly may compute,
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But know not what's resisted.
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By the same token, no great poet whose name is linked with our Craft ever
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owed more to Freemasonry, or gave more to it. More intimately than any
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other he was identified with its life, its genius and its ideals. Its
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teachings moved his thought; its spirit inspired his song; its genius
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nurtured that love of freedom and Fraternity which he set to everlasting
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music. So much is this true, that it remains a marvel to this day how
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Shairp could have written a biography of Burns without once mentioning his
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membership in the Craft. In the gentle air of Freemasonry he found refuge
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from hardship and heaviness of spirit; and its fellowship served to shelter
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him from the poisoned arrows of petty bigots who were unworthy to untie his
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shoes - men of a kind known in every age, whose hard-heartedness was clad
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in unctuous hypocrisy.
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Surely, if ever of any one, it can be said of Robert Burns, that his soul
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goes marching on. He was the harbinger of the nineteenth century, the poet
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of the rights and reign of the common people, whom, it has been said, God
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must love because he made so many of them. The earth was fresh upon the
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tomb of George Washington when that century was born; it discovered Lincoln
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and buried him with infinite regret. But its triumphant melody first found
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voice in the songs of Robert Burns, as the greek singer inspired Patriarch
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with the fire which kindled the Revival of Learning, and out of the inertia
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of the Middle Ages created modern times. So when Taine, the French critic,
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came to account for that age he found that it's spirit "Broke First in the
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Scotch Peasant, Robert Burns." - a man of all men most fitted to give it
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voice, because "scarcely ever was seen together more of misery and of
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talent."
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There are those who dream of a vague blur of cosmopolitism, in which all
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local loyalties, all heroic national genius shall be merged and forgotten.
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Not so Robert Burns. He was distinctively a national poet, striking deep
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roots in his native soil, and, for that reason, touching a chord so
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haunting that it echoes forever. This at least is true; a man who is not
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deeply rooted somewhere - to whom one spot on earth is not a little dearer,
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and the sky over it a little bluer - will not be of much use anywhere.
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When Burns appeared the spirit of Scotland was a low ebb. Her people were
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crushed and her ancient fire almost quenched. Her scholars blushed if they
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used her dialect. It was at such a time that a God-Endowed singer took up
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his harp, inspired by the history of his people, the traditions of Wallace
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and Bruce stirring him like a passion, his soul attuned to the old ballads
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of love and daring, singing the simple life of his nation in its vivid and
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picturesque language. He struck with a delicate but strong hand the deep
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and noble feelings of his countrymen, and somewhere upon his variegated
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robe of song will be found embroidered the life, the faith, the genius of
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his people. No wonder the men loved a poet, and make his home at once a
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throne of melody and a shrine of national glory.
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Because he was so deeply rooted in the soil of his own land; because he was
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so sweetly, sadly, joyously - yea, and even sinfully - human, his spirit
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and appeal are universal, for the human heart beats everywhere the same,
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and by loyalty to the genius of our own country we best serve our race.
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His passion for liberty, his affirmation of the nobility of man, his sense
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if dignity of labor, his pictures of the pathos and the hard lot of the
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lowly, find response in every breast where beats the heart of a man. It is
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thus that all men love Burns, for it was he who taught, as few have taught
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since the Son of Man lodged with the fishermen by the sea, the brotherhood
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of man and the kinship of all breathing things. Such singers live as long
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as men love life, and their words become a part of the sacred scriptures of
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the human heart.
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This is no time to deal in literary criticism - a dreary business at best,
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a dismal business at worst. It is by all agreed that Robert Burns was a
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lyric poet of the first order, if not the greatest song writer of the
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world. Draw a line from Shakespeare to Browning, and he is one of the few
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minds tall enough to touch it. The qualities of Burns are simplicity,
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naturalness, vividness, fire, sweet-toned pathos, and rollicking humor -
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qualities rare enough, and still more rarelyblended. His fame rests upon
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verses written swiftly, as men write letters, and upon songs as
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spontaneous, as artless, as lovely as the songs of birds. He sang of
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simple things, of the joys and woes and pieties of the common life, where
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sin bewshadows virtue and the cup of death is pressed to the lips of love.
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He saw the world as God made it, woven of good and ill, of light and
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shadow, and his songs come home to rich and poor alike, a comfort and a
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consecration.
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No wonder Burns was the best beloved poet of Lincoln, as much for his
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democracy as for his humor, his pathos, and his rich humanity. With him
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social rank was but a guinea stamp, a bit of tawdry tinsel alongside the
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native nobility of manhood. He honored a man for his worth, not for his
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wealth. For the snob, for the fop, he had genuine contempt. If he flayed
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the selfish pride of the rich, it was not from envy - just as truly did he
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scorn the poor man who, instead of standing erect, only cringes and whines.
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He told the poor man that it is no sin to be poor, but that it is a sin to
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be ashamed of it. He taught that honest poverty is not only nobler, but
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happier, than indolent or il-gotten wealth. The Cotter's dog and the
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Laird's dog are very real dogs, as all admit, but their talk is something
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more than dog-philosophy. It is the old, old story of the high and the
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low, and it is like Burns to take the part of the under dog.
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Still, had the Cotter's dog given way to self-pity, Burns would have been
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the first to kick him. He hated fawning, as he hated sham, and he knew
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that if toil is tragedy, labor is an honor and joy.
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That which lives in Robert Burns, and will live while human nature is the
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same, is his love of justice, of honesty, of reality, his touch of pathos
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and melting sympathy, his demand for liberty, his faith in man and God -
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all uttered with simple speech and the golden voice of song. His poems
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were little jets of love and liberty and pity finding their way out through
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the fissures in the granite-like theology of his day. They came fresh from
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the heart of a man whom the death of a little bird set dreaming of the
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meaning of the world wherein life is woven of beauty, mystery and sorrow.
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A flower crushed in the budding, a field mouse turned out of his home by a
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plowshare, a wounded hare limping along the road to dusty death, or the
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memory of a tiny bird who sang for him in the days agone, touched him to
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tears, and made him feel the old hurt and heartache of the world.
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The poems of Burns did not grow; they awoke complete. He was a child of
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the open air, and about all his songs there is an outdoor feeling - never a
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smell of the lamp. He saw nature with the swift glances of a child - saw
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beauty in the fold of clouds, in the slant of trees, in the lilt and glint
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of flowing waters, in the immortal game of hide-and-seek played by sunbeams
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and shadows, in the mists trailing over the hills. The sigh of the wind in
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the forest filled him with a kind of wild, sad joy, and the tender face of
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a mountain daisy was like the thought of one much loved and long dead. The
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throb of his heart was warm in his words, and it was a heart in which he
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carried an alabaster box of pity. He had a sad life and soul of fire, the
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instincts of an angel in the midst of hard poverty; yet he lived with dash
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and daring, sometimes with folly, and, we must add, - else we do not know
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Burns - with a certain bubbling joyousness, despite his tragedy.
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Such was the spirit of Robert Burns, a man passionate and piteous, compact
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of light and flame and loveliness, capable of withering scorn of wrong,
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quickly shifting from the ludicrous to the horrible in his fancy, poised
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between laughter and tears - and if by some art se could send his soul into
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all the dark places of the world, pity and joy would return to the common
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ways of man. His feet may have been in the furrow, but the nobility of
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manhood was in his heart, on his lips the voice of eternal melody, and in
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his face the light of the morning star. Long live the spirit of Robert
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Burns, Poet and Freeemason! May it grow and glow to the confounding of all
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injustice, all unkindness!
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He haunts his native land
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As an immortal youth; his hand
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Guides every plow.
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His presence haunts this room tonight,
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A form of mingled mist and light
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From that far coast.
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Copyright 1923 by the Masonic Service association of the United States.
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The contents of this
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Bulletin must not be reproduced, in whole or in part, without permission.
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