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  • Sept. 5, 1868
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, Sept. 5, 1868: Page 19

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Obituary.

colleagues of tha French Academy , F . Genovay spoke as follows : — '' After tho words you have just heard , a most imperious du : y must urge me on to trouble your feelings and to speak over this tomb ; but it is my duty , in the name of Scotch Masonry , to render a last tribute to its beloved chief .

"For many , ninny years he has been of our Order ; he has taken a generous share in all our labours ; he has loved and defended that which ive love and defend ; and , to his last hour , he remained faithful to us . For those who know our principles , and who have known the illustrious deceased , in such perseverance there is nothing to be astonished at . Old age respected his

intelligence and kind-heartedness . " You have heard his talents praised ; we come to render homage to the right-mindedness of this conscience which remained pure , and obeyed only its own dictates —a rare virtue iu all ages , still moz-e so in ours . Neither his word nor his pen have known weakness ; he never wrote or said other thwi he thought . He never looked for

fortune , and when honours sought him he retained , even under their influence , his full and free independence of character . He shone in all his words , and our lodge will never forget the juvenile ardour with which he defended it some years ago . Besides , our institution with its grand principle of universal brotherhood , charmed his reason , and i _ was by it , much more than by virtue of

his powers , that he ruled us and deserved tho filial homage which ive take a pleasure in rendering him . More than once the proofs of our veneration have gently moved his heart , and we experience tho same sentiments even at this cold tomb . May it also receive our promises ! We shall never forget the honest teachings of his life , his respect for truth , the ardent love he professed for his country , his liberal doctrines which he considered an

honour to hare always defended . This is the inheritance he has left to his Masonic family ; it accepts it , it will preserve it fr . irkfiilly and his name ivill never be forgotten by us . "Adieu , most illustrious Master , calmly repose . Sleep in peace ; your sons will mourn for you , aud remember you , and will fight for justice and truth as

though you were still their chief . " Adieu , very illustrious Bro . E . Yiennet . Peace and honour to your ashes ! Masonry loses in you the best of its apostles , the most honoured one amongst its chiefs . " Adieu , good and excellent man . ' Soon , elsewhere , we shall render you the funeral honours that ive owe

you , and if our voice has been raised in this sad place , it is because we have been anxious that the world might know our mourning , and that it might be witness to our inconsolable grief . " Bro . Yieimet was originally destined to succeed one of his uncles , curate of Saint Mcry , which was at this period one of tho most , important pavishes of Paris .

The dignities and ecclesiastical benefices were at that time transmitted from uncle to nephew , cousin to cousin , sometimes from father to son , as the family patrimony . The revolution deprived Bro . Yien ' net of this portion of his inheritance , and the . future cure of Paris entered the Marine . Artillery in 1796 as lieutenant . Twice prisoner , in 1797 and in 1813 , he was only captain at the time of

the restoration , to ivhich ho gave his ardent support . " During the Hundred Days , " says one of his biographers , " M . Yiennet refused to vote for the additional act of tho Empire , and , unless a powerful intervention had been made , be would have paid for his opposition by transportation to Cayenne . " * At the very commencement of his career , Bro . Yiennet had voted against the consulate for life , and against the

Empire , which explains the fact of the lieutenant of 1796 being only captain at the second Restoration . In 1815 Captain Yiennet was admitted as c 7 te / d ' escadron in the royal bodyguard . But , in 1827 , after the publication of TUTS pitre aux clieffonier sur les crimes de la sresse ( The epistle to the rag collectors on the crimes of the press ) he was struck off the staff , and the same year nominated

deputy for the town of Sealers . He took his seat on the Opposition benches , and did not cease to oppose the government of Charles X . until the Revolution of 1830 . He entered the Academy in the month of November , 1830 , in the room of M . de Segur . His colleague was Benjamin Constant . Bro . Yiennet committed the error of not giving up the place , and the honourable body made

a still greater mistake in voting for him . His name was stamped with unpopularity aud ib never left him . In turn Minister , Peer of France , Academician , he became the mark for the criticism of the press for the Opposition ; and if it were possible to reproach him with a simplicity of life and manners , which in our eyes forms one of bis principal virtues , the accusations for the greater part of ivhich he ivas the object were justified by tbe violence of his attacks against the revolutionary party

and against romantic literature . Let us say , however , to the praise of Bro . Yiennet that his hatred against romances—a persistent hatred which we can still testify to in one of the last- numbers of Le Monde Maconniqiic—did not prevent him pronouncing in favour of tho admission of Bro . Victor Hugo to the French Academy , nor from voting for him ; it seems ,

at least from' the following letter of Beranger ( letter unedited ) and we owe the communication to the kindness of OUT F . aud friend , Eugene Despois : — "Hero you haro , my dearX , a little reply to our young compatriot . I wrr . e also to M , wishing him a good Minister of- Finance . The choice they will make troubles you not a little , Monsieur Philosopher .

What do you say to a refusal of the endowment ? We must never despair for anyone , not even for a bad Chamber . Who knows ? The Academy may one day wish to admit Hugo . Yiennet has at least had the good sense to express himself in favour of such admission . I should be still more obliged to him if he had no ill will against Doctor Flourant . " BEIUXGER . " ' " 26 th February ( 1840 ) . " Bro . Yiennet has described himself in the preface to his Fables after the folio wins- manner : —¦

" My character is a strange blending of kindness and causticity ; as a rule I distrust everything and everybody , and I put faith in the first comer . Constraint , twists and turns , ambiguities and grimaces fatigue and irritate me . I walk straight , and lame people do not suit me . Nature has caused to pass from the veins of my father to I know not what portion of my body a

conscious intuition which believes in a discriminative power as to what is true or false , just or unjust , and which will not permit my tongue to tamper with the truth , to disguise it , or to refuse it to any one in search , of it . It is the most terrible gift that heaven can make to man who is obliged to live with men . It is the surest guarantee that the possessor will be duped all his life ; in this respect my destiny has been accomplished , as Orestes says , but he adds that he is content , but I say not so . "

_ This last phrase is characteristic . It indicates sufficiently well the turn aud range of mind of Bro . Yiennet ; honest spirit , but of a limited power and unlimited vanity ; frank' character , a blending of giddiness and spontaneity and of a very dark deep susceptibility . Bro . Yiennet believed ho possessed an exact notion of the false and the realtho just and the unjust ; on this head

, , as on many others , he deceived himself ; his errors are numerous in literature as in politics ; and the pretension of judging everything thus by a natural gift , without method or reflection , to distinguish at first si ght the true and the false , explains precisely the weakness of his

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1868-09-05, Page 19” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 1 April 2023, www.masonicperiodicals.org/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_05091868/page/19/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
THE KNIGHTS TEMPLARS. Article 1
PALESTINE EXPLORATION FUND. Article 2
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 7
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 9
MASONIC MEMS. Article 10
GRAND LODGE. Article 10
PROVINCIAL. Article 14
INDIA. Article 15
SCOTLAND. Article 16
PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 18
Obituary. Article 18
THE LATE BRO. THOMAS POWRIE. Article 20
METROPOLITAN LODGE MEETINGS, ETC., FOR THE WEEK ENDING SEPTEMBER 12th, 1868. Article 20
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 20
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Obituary.

colleagues of tha French Academy , F . Genovay spoke as follows : — '' After tho words you have just heard , a most imperious du : y must urge me on to trouble your feelings and to speak over this tomb ; but it is my duty , in the name of Scotch Masonry , to render a last tribute to its beloved chief .

"For many , ninny years he has been of our Order ; he has taken a generous share in all our labours ; he has loved and defended that which ive love and defend ; and , to his last hour , he remained faithful to us . For those who know our principles , and who have known the illustrious deceased , in such perseverance there is nothing to be astonished at . Old age respected his

intelligence and kind-heartedness . " You have heard his talents praised ; we come to render homage to the right-mindedness of this conscience which remained pure , and obeyed only its own dictates —a rare virtue iu all ages , still moz-e so in ours . Neither his word nor his pen have known weakness ; he never wrote or said other thwi he thought . He never looked for

fortune , and when honours sought him he retained , even under their influence , his full and free independence of character . He shone in all his words , and our lodge will never forget the juvenile ardour with which he defended it some years ago . Besides , our institution with its grand principle of universal brotherhood , charmed his reason , and i _ was by it , much more than by virtue of

his powers , that he ruled us and deserved tho filial homage which ive take a pleasure in rendering him . More than once the proofs of our veneration have gently moved his heart , and we experience tho same sentiments even at this cold tomb . May it also receive our promises ! We shall never forget the honest teachings of his life , his respect for truth , the ardent love he professed for his country , his liberal doctrines which he considered an

honour to hare always defended . This is the inheritance he has left to his Masonic family ; it accepts it , it will preserve it fr . irkfiilly and his name ivill never be forgotten by us . "Adieu , most illustrious Master , calmly repose . Sleep in peace ; your sons will mourn for you , aud remember you , and will fight for justice and truth as

though you were still their chief . " Adieu , very illustrious Bro . E . Yiennet . Peace and honour to your ashes ! Masonry loses in you the best of its apostles , the most honoured one amongst its chiefs . " Adieu , good and excellent man . ' Soon , elsewhere , we shall render you the funeral honours that ive owe

you , and if our voice has been raised in this sad place , it is because we have been anxious that the world might know our mourning , and that it might be witness to our inconsolable grief . " Bro . Yieimet was originally destined to succeed one of his uncles , curate of Saint Mcry , which was at this period one of tho most , important pavishes of Paris .

The dignities and ecclesiastical benefices were at that time transmitted from uncle to nephew , cousin to cousin , sometimes from father to son , as the family patrimony . The revolution deprived Bro . Yien ' net of this portion of his inheritance , and the . future cure of Paris entered the Marine . Artillery in 1796 as lieutenant . Twice prisoner , in 1797 and in 1813 , he was only captain at the time of

the restoration , to ivhich ho gave his ardent support . " During the Hundred Days , " says one of his biographers , " M . Yiennet refused to vote for the additional act of tho Empire , and , unless a powerful intervention had been made , be would have paid for his opposition by transportation to Cayenne . " * At the very commencement of his career , Bro . Yiennet had voted against the consulate for life , and against the

Empire , which explains the fact of the lieutenant of 1796 being only captain at the second Restoration . In 1815 Captain Yiennet was admitted as c 7 te / d ' escadron in the royal bodyguard . But , in 1827 , after the publication of TUTS pitre aux clieffonier sur les crimes de la sresse ( The epistle to the rag collectors on the crimes of the press ) he was struck off the staff , and the same year nominated

deputy for the town of Sealers . He took his seat on the Opposition benches , and did not cease to oppose the government of Charles X . until the Revolution of 1830 . He entered the Academy in the month of November , 1830 , in the room of M . de Segur . His colleague was Benjamin Constant . Bro . Yiennet committed the error of not giving up the place , and the honourable body made

a still greater mistake in voting for him . His name was stamped with unpopularity aud ib never left him . In turn Minister , Peer of France , Academician , he became the mark for the criticism of the press for the Opposition ; and if it were possible to reproach him with a simplicity of life and manners , which in our eyes forms one of bis principal virtues , the accusations for the greater part of ivhich he ivas the object were justified by tbe violence of his attacks against the revolutionary party

and against romantic literature . Let us say , however , to the praise of Bro . Yiennet that his hatred against romances—a persistent hatred which we can still testify to in one of the last- numbers of Le Monde Maconniqiic—did not prevent him pronouncing in favour of tho admission of Bro . Victor Hugo to the French Academy , nor from voting for him ; it seems ,

at least from' the following letter of Beranger ( letter unedited ) and we owe the communication to the kindness of OUT F . aud friend , Eugene Despois : — "Hero you haro , my dearX , a little reply to our young compatriot . I wrr . e also to M , wishing him a good Minister of- Finance . The choice they will make troubles you not a little , Monsieur Philosopher .

What do you say to a refusal of the endowment ? We must never despair for anyone , not even for a bad Chamber . Who knows ? The Academy may one day wish to admit Hugo . Yiennet has at least had the good sense to express himself in favour of such admission . I should be still more obliged to him if he had no ill will against Doctor Flourant . " BEIUXGER . " ' " 26 th February ( 1840 ) . " Bro . Yiennet has described himself in the preface to his Fables after the folio wins- manner : —¦

" My character is a strange blending of kindness and causticity ; as a rule I distrust everything and everybody , and I put faith in the first comer . Constraint , twists and turns , ambiguities and grimaces fatigue and irritate me . I walk straight , and lame people do not suit me . Nature has caused to pass from the veins of my father to I know not what portion of my body a

conscious intuition which believes in a discriminative power as to what is true or false , just or unjust , and which will not permit my tongue to tamper with the truth , to disguise it , or to refuse it to any one in search , of it . It is the most terrible gift that heaven can make to man who is obliged to live with men . It is the surest guarantee that the possessor will be duped all his life ; in this respect my destiny has been accomplished , as Orestes says , but he adds that he is content , but I say not so . "

_ This last phrase is characteristic . It indicates sufficiently well the turn aud range of mind of Bro . Yiennet ; honest spirit , but of a limited power and unlimited vanity ; frank' character , a blending of giddiness and spontaneity and of a very dark deep susceptibility . Bro . Yiennet believed ho possessed an exact notion of the false and the realtho just and the unjust ; on this head

, , as on many others , he deceived himself ; his errors are numerous in literature as in politics ; and the pretension of judging everything thus by a natural gift , without method or reflection , to distinguish at first si ght the true and the false , explains precisely the weakness of his

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