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  • The Freemasons' Quarterly Review
  • Dec. 31, 1850
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The Freemasons' Quarterly Review, Dec. 31, 1850: Page 21

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    Article A DIPLOMATIST'S MEMORY. ← Page 3 of 6 →
Page 21

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

A Diplomatist's Memory.

letter . " After a long family consultation an uncle was dispatched , purposely , to town , to see Lord S , and try the effect of a personal interview . It was obtained with extreme difficulty , only to issue in renewed disappointment : when assured that the mislaid letter was still in existence , and would yet be forthcoming , but that the strictest search

had hitherto failed in bringing it to light . Lord S re-adjusted his spectacles , looked the flushed and agitated speaker full in the face , and speaking with great deliberation , said , with provoking calmness , that " the promise could exist only in the imagination of the family ; such a promise could never have been made b y him ; it was utterly impossible ; inasmuch as it was " at variance with every principle which he had observed during a long official life . "

Further struggle was fruitless ; the reduced and dispirited family yielded to a hostile influence which they could not control . One daughter became a governess ; another went out to India . The youngest son entered the merchant service ; the second , Edward , half maddened by his disappointment , and resolved no longer to eat the bread of

dependence , worked his passage out before the mast to Demerara , where he obtained employment , but died within a year from the effects of climate . Many months after his death , when Lord S and his promise were almost forgotten , or if perchance momentarily recalled were hastildismissed as subjects fraught

y only with useless and indescribable anguish , the mother was slowly turning over some relics of her absent children , and thinking the while of those beaming faces and cheerful voices that were never more to gladden eye or ear ; among other matters , an old fishing-basket belonging to the deceased—the companion of many a joyous excursion—was

dejectedly examined . The contents were miscellaneous enough : a pair of boxing-gloves , a powder-flask , the thong of a hunting-whip , a couple of brass reels , a broken foil , and a cigar-case . Replacing them with a sigh , she turned to examine a large discoloured morocco case which lay beneath . It was crammed with artificial flieshooks of all

, sizes , fishing-lines , and choice feathers from the wild duck . In a side pocket , most carefully wrapped up in three or four casings of stout paper , lay some document . She opened it . It was the long-sought letter in Sir Charles ' s frank , with a few lines from the baronet himself , expressive of his

“The Freemasons' Quarterly Review: 1850-12-31, Page 21” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 16 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fqr/issues/fqr_31121850/page/21/.
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Title Category Page
THE FREEMASONS' QUARTERLY MAGAZINE AND REVIEW. Article 1
THE REVELATIONS OF A SQUARE. Article 7
A DIPLOMATIST'S MEMORY. Article 19
NOTES UPON FUNERAL SOLEMNITIES. Article 25
SONNET TO MASONRY. Article 28
SYMBOL OF GLORY* Article 29
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 40
TO THE EDITOR. Article 41
TO THE EDITOR. Article 42
TO THE EDITOR. Article 43
TO THE EDITOR. Article 44
TO THE EDITOR. Article 45
TO THE EDITOR. Article 46
TO THE EDITOR. Article 47
TO THE EDITOR. Article 49
Obituary. Article 53
COLLECTANEA. Article 65
ON THE INAUGURATION OF THE CORONATION STONE, KINGSTON-ON-THAMES, SEPTEMBER 19, 1850. Article 67
THE KINGSTON CORONATION STONE. Article 69
MASONIC CHARITY. Article 69
MASONIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 70
UNITED GRAND LODGE. Article 70
THE 33RD DEGREE FOR ENGLAND AND WALES , AND THE DEPENDENCIES OF THE BRITISH CROWN. Article 75
METROPOLITAN. Article 76
PROVINCIAL. Article 78
IRELAND. Article 99
COLONIAL. Article 101
AMERICA. Article 102
LITERARY NOTICES. Article 104
NOTICES TO CORRESPONDENTS. P. %., IPSWIC... Article 108
INDEX. Article 109
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Page 21

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

A Diplomatist's Memory.

letter . " After a long family consultation an uncle was dispatched , purposely , to town , to see Lord S , and try the effect of a personal interview . It was obtained with extreme difficulty , only to issue in renewed disappointment : when assured that the mislaid letter was still in existence , and would yet be forthcoming , but that the strictest search

had hitherto failed in bringing it to light . Lord S re-adjusted his spectacles , looked the flushed and agitated speaker full in the face , and speaking with great deliberation , said , with provoking calmness , that " the promise could exist only in the imagination of the family ; such a promise could never have been made b y him ; it was utterly impossible ; inasmuch as it was " at variance with every principle which he had observed during a long official life . "

Further struggle was fruitless ; the reduced and dispirited family yielded to a hostile influence which they could not control . One daughter became a governess ; another went out to India . The youngest son entered the merchant service ; the second , Edward , half maddened by his disappointment , and resolved no longer to eat the bread of

dependence , worked his passage out before the mast to Demerara , where he obtained employment , but died within a year from the effects of climate . Many months after his death , when Lord S and his promise were almost forgotten , or if perchance momentarily recalled were hastildismissed as subjects fraught

y only with useless and indescribable anguish , the mother was slowly turning over some relics of her absent children , and thinking the while of those beaming faces and cheerful voices that were never more to gladden eye or ear ; among other matters , an old fishing-basket belonging to the deceased—the companion of many a joyous excursion—was

dejectedly examined . The contents were miscellaneous enough : a pair of boxing-gloves , a powder-flask , the thong of a hunting-whip , a couple of brass reels , a broken foil , and a cigar-case . Replacing them with a sigh , she turned to examine a large discoloured morocco case which lay beneath . It was crammed with artificial flieshooks of all

, sizes , fishing-lines , and choice feathers from the wild duck . In a side pocket , most carefully wrapped up in three or four casings of stout paper , lay some document . She opened it . It was the long-sought letter in Sir Charles ' s frank , with a few lines from the baronet himself , expressive of his

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