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  • Sept. 30, 1837
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The Freemasons' Quarterly Review, Sept. 30, 1837: Page 116

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    Article SAUNDERS FYFE, ← Page 4 of 4
Page 116

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

Saunders Fyfe,

Their pure souls had fled , even as if the road to Heaven had been through atween ane anither ' s pale blae lips . It was a sad but holy sight to see twa forms , which had sae lately been the earthly dwelling places o ' immortal speerits , lying close thegifher , as still , cauld , an' lifeless , as if they had been marble images that ne ' er were blest wi' a puff o' mortal breath . The same cauld hand o' death that passed ower the brow o' the ane had been mingled in the bluid o' the ither ; an' a sair an' heavy trial

it was to see them baith ta ' en to the kirk-yard under a coffin-lid . " But oor cup o' sorrow was na' yet fu ' , for the very next year , my son—my only son—Willie , wha was the pride o' my heart , fell on the red field o' Waterloo , covered wi' what the world ca ' s glory ancl honour ; but , alas J alas . ' what was the glory an' honour o' puir AA ' illie ' s death to his mother or me either , who wadna hae g i ' en ae hour o' his young life for a' the glory an' honour that was baith lost and won in that great an' bluitly conflict o' the nations ; after which I had but ae link left to bind me to life ; an' noo that it is broken , alas ! I care nae hoo sune I ' m ta ' en fra this earth to where the Lord wull .

" Ihe bereavements with which I hae been afflicted cam' sair an ' fast on the back o' ane anither ; an' when my first born fell coffinless intill a foreign grave , amang strangers , my heart had nae langer ony thing to do wi' either hope or happiness . A' things were changed in my e ' e but Alarion ; she alone seemed immoveable in her mind , as she had been in her tender affection towards me . Even the face o' nature itsel ' lookit dowie ancl sorrowfu ' , ancl in my sinfu' and corrupt heart there was a strong hankering against the decrees o' Divine Providence , for which sin I ' m now punished wi' a rod that is far heavier than I am able to bear .

" The angle o death passed in quick succession ower the hail o' my house ; an' noo , he is at this moment o' time waving his terrible twaedged sword o' destruction aboon my ain devoted head ; an' I trust he will smite in mercy , rather than spare a life that is nae langer usefu ' , an ' therefore nae langer worth the possessing . " Lang ere times grew sae tight wi' the farmer I was rendered listless , heartless , an' hopeless , which , nae doubt , lent a strong hand to help me wi

ahint ' my rent , an' brought on ither difficulties , for which their was nae remedy , an' sae it behooved me to flit . Things had -come this far , when on the Lord ' s Day , an' on the very door o' his holy tabernacle , Marion Logan lived to read ' Roup of Farm Stocking , at Foxcroft ;' but her e ' e already grown dim wi' sorrow , cauld see nae mair , an ' for the first time in my life I turned frae the house o' God , whan my head was under the lintel , ancl my foot upon the threshold . Wi' sair ado I got Alarion hame , an' helpit her into the bed , oot o' which she ne ' er again sought to rise , for her kind heart was fairly , an' forever , bro—bro—broken !"

It was at tins part ofthe narrative that the old man ' s voice faltered , as lie shifted his position , when his eye became troubled , and occasionally fixed upon vacancy ; his lip quivered , and his whole frame shook in the agitation of his forlorn heart , until he fairly sobbed aloud , and hung his aged head in the mournful bitterness of hopeless grief . A train of dire misfortunes , rendered still more insupportable by deep domestic arTh ' ctfon , had reduced him , from a state of ease and comparative

affluence , to the solitary outcast which now appeared before me . The withering hand of time had blighted and destroyed tlie happy contentment of his youth , and , at the eleventh hour of his life , he was a pennyless , friendless , and homeless wanderer on the earth .

“The Freemasons' Quarterly Review: 1837-09-30, Page 116” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 16 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fqr/issues/fqr_30091837/page/116/.
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Title Category Page
CONTENTS. Article 1
TO OUR READERS. Article 2
THE FREEMASONS' QUARTERLY REVIEW. Article 3
ON FREEMASONRY. Article 11
SIGNS AND SYMBOLS.* Article 20
THE ARCHITECTURE OF THE HEAVENS. Article 26
MASONIC DIDACTICS; Article 30
EXTRACT FROM HENRY'S HISTORY OF ENGLAND. Article 31
MASONRY RESTORED TO ITS GENUINE PRINCIPLES. Article 33
THE SONGS OF MASONRY. Article 36
ON THE MYSTIC NUMBERS, 9 AND 15. Article 49
FUNERAL OF NAPOLEON'S MOTHER. ROME, FEB. 7, 1836. Article 50
THE TEAR. Article 52
THE HYPERCRITIC. Article 53
POVERTY AND PRETENSION. Article 54
THE WISH. Article 55
MASONIC ANECDOTE. Article 55
TO THE EDITOR. Article 56
TO THE EDITOR. Article 56
MASONIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 60
SUPREAIE GRAND CHAPTER. Article 66
ASYLUM FOR AGED AND DECAYED FREEMASONS.* Article 67
QUARTERLY COMMUNICATION. Article 76
ROYAL MASONIC INSTITUTION FOR BOYS. Article 77
ROYAL FREEMASONS' SCHOOL FOR FEMALE CHILDREN. Article 79
LODGES OF INSTRUCTION. Article 80
MASONIC CHIT CHAT. Article 81
Obituary. Article 83
PROVINCIAL. Article 84
SCOTLAND. Article 103
IRELAND. Article 103
FOREIGN. Article 108
INDIA. Article 109
LINES TO E. Article 111
THE GREAT ARCHITECT. Article 112
THE FUNERAL AT SEA. Article 112
FAIR FRANCE. Article 112
SAUNDERS FYFE, Article 113
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 117
¦ ' ^^ .^UC^-/-^ . .. * : ¦ ' :;" ¦ Article 119
Untitled Ad 120
Boohs. 6jrc, for Review should be sent A... Article 121
FREEMASONS 9 f QUARTERLY ADVERTISER. No.... Article 122
EREEMASONRY. ASYLUM FOR AGED AND DECAYED... Article 122
| FREEMASONRY. I ROYAL FREEMASONS' SCHOO... Article 122
H 'FREEMASONRY I ROYAL MASONIC INSTITUTI... Article 122
« DEDICATED TO SIR JOHN ST. AUBYN, BART.... Article 123
PKEEMASONRY. I-I.R.H. THE DUKE OF SUSSEX... Article 123
pn'EFMASONRY. rr«HE MEETINGS ofthe EMULA... Article 123
ROYAL ARCH MASONRY. /COMPANION J HARRIS,... Article 123
FREEMASONRY..T. P. ACKLA M, MASONIC JEWE... Article 123
FREEMASONRY . BROTHER W. POVEY, BOOKBIND... Article 124
MASONIC LIBRARY. BROTHER RICHARD SPENCER... Article 124
T IFE ANNUITIES, TO INCREASE THE PRESENT... Article 125
rpHE Proprietors ofthe HORTICULTURAL JOU... Article 125
THE NOBILITY, GENTRY, AMATEURS, and GARD... Article 125
First Complete Edition, Uniform with BYR... Article 125
On the 1st of January, 1838, will be pub... Article 125
New and Improved Edition of QKELLETT'S C... Article 125
MOUBRAY ON POULTRY, PIGS, AND COWS. Seve... Article 126
BY SIR JOHN SINCLAIR. Fifth Edition, wit... Article 126
DR. OLIVER'S LECTURES ON EREEMASONRY r .... Article 126
Just Published, small 8vo. price 6s. clo... Article 126
Fifth Edition, Price 5.?. PILES and PROL... Article 127
ECCLES ON ULCERS, Third Edition, nearly ... Article 127
BLACKWOOD'S LADY'S MAGAZINE FOR OCTOBER,... Article 127
PATENT LEVER WATCHES, with silver double... Article 127
WATCHES, with MASSEY'S PATENT DETACHED L... Article 128
UNDER THE PATRONAGE OP HIS LATE MAJESTY ... Article 128
EIGHT DAY CLOCKS, TO STRIKE THE HOURS AN... Article 129
TO THE NOBILITY, GENTRY, AND FAMILIES FU... Article 129
MINTER'S PATENT, SELF-ACTING, RECLINING,... Article 129
AT a time when doubts justly arise respe... Article 129
ELLIOTT'S POMADE, FOR. THE GROWTH AND NO... Article 129
Muqna est Veritas et pra'valehit. GALL'S... Article 130
SARSAPAR1LLA. TVTR- WRAY, of Holborn Hil... Article 130
TO PREAa?NT FRAUD. THORNE'S POTTED YARMO... Article 130
Untitled Ad 131
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Page 116

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

Saunders Fyfe,

Their pure souls had fled , even as if the road to Heaven had been through atween ane anither ' s pale blae lips . It was a sad but holy sight to see twa forms , which had sae lately been the earthly dwelling places o ' immortal speerits , lying close thegifher , as still , cauld , an' lifeless , as if they had been marble images that ne ' er were blest wi' a puff o' mortal breath . The same cauld hand o' death that passed ower the brow o' the ane had been mingled in the bluid o' the ither ; an' a sair an' heavy trial

it was to see them baith ta ' en to the kirk-yard under a coffin-lid . " But oor cup o' sorrow was na' yet fu ' , for the very next year , my son—my only son—Willie , wha was the pride o' my heart , fell on the red field o' Waterloo , covered wi' what the world ca ' s glory ancl honour ; but , alas J alas . ' what was the glory an' honour o' puir AA ' illie ' s death to his mother or me either , who wadna hae g i ' en ae hour o' his young life for a' the glory an' honour that was baith lost and won in that great an' bluitly conflict o' the nations ; after which I had but ae link left to bind me to life ; an' noo that it is broken , alas ! I care nae hoo sune I ' m ta ' en fra this earth to where the Lord wull .

" Ihe bereavements with which I hae been afflicted cam' sair an ' fast on the back o' ane anither ; an' when my first born fell coffinless intill a foreign grave , amang strangers , my heart had nae langer ony thing to do wi' either hope or happiness . A' things were changed in my e ' e but Alarion ; she alone seemed immoveable in her mind , as she had been in her tender affection towards me . Even the face o' nature itsel ' lookit dowie ancl sorrowfu ' , ancl in my sinfu' and corrupt heart there was a strong hankering against the decrees o' Divine Providence , for which sin I ' m now punished wi' a rod that is far heavier than I am able to bear .

" The angle o death passed in quick succession ower the hail o' my house ; an' noo , he is at this moment o' time waving his terrible twaedged sword o' destruction aboon my ain devoted head ; an' I trust he will smite in mercy , rather than spare a life that is nae langer usefu ' , an ' therefore nae langer worth the possessing . " Lang ere times grew sae tight wi' the farmer I was rendered listless , heartless , an' hopeless , which , nae doubt , lent a strong hand to help me wi

ahint ' my rent , an' brought on ither difficulties , for which their was nae remedy , an' sae it behooved me to flit . Things had -come this far , when on the Lord ' s Day , an' on the very door o' his holy tabernacle , Marion Logan lived to read ' Roup of Farm Stocking , at Foxcroft ;' but her e ' e already grown dim wi' sorrow , cauld see nae mair , an ' for the first time in my life I turned frae the house o' God , whan my head was under the lintel , ancl my foot upon the threshold . Wi' sair ado I got Alarion hame , an' helpit her into the bed , oot o' which she ne ' er again sought to rise , for her kind heart was fairly , an' forever , bro—bro—broken !"

It was at tins part ofthe narrative that the old man ' s voice faltered , as lie shifted his position , when his eye became troubled , and occasionally fixed upon vacancy ; his lip quivered , and his whole frame shook in the agitation of his forlorn heart , until he fairly sobbed aloud , and hung his aged head in the mournful bitterness of hopeless grief . A train of dire misfortunes , rendered still more insupportable by deep domestic arTh ' ctfon , had reduced him , from a state of ease and comparative

affluence , to the solitary outcast which now appeared before me . The withering hand of time had blighted and destroyed tlie happy contentment of his youth , and , at the eleventh hour of his life , he was a pennyless , friendless , and homeless wanderer on the earth .

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