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  • Dec. 21, 1885
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Catherine Carmichael ; Or, Three Years Running .

Catherine Carmichael ; or , Three Years Running .

BY ANTHONY" TROLLOPtt .

CEIAPTKH J .

Cin ; is * nus DAY . NO . 1 .

A T II E lt IN E C A R M 10 HAE L , whoso name is prefixed to tin ' s story , was very early in her life made acquainted with trouble . That name became hers when she was married , but tlio reader

must first know her as Catherine Baird . Her father was a Scotch-» man of gootl birth , and A had once been possessed

of fair means . But tho world had gone against him , and ho had taken his family out to New

Zealand when Catherine was as yet but ton years old . Of Mr . Baird and his misfortunes little need be said , except that for nearly ' a dozen years he followed the precarious and demoralizing * trade of a gold-digger at Hokitika . Sometimes there was money in plenty , sometimes there was none .

Pood thero was , always plenty , though food of the roughest . Drink thero was , generally , much more than plenty ; Everything around the young . Bairds was rough . Frequently changing thoir residence from ono shanty to another , the last shanty inhabited by them would always be tho roughest .

As for the common decencies of life , they seem to become ever scarcer and more scarce with them , although the females among them had a taste for decency , and although they lived in a region which then seemed to be running oyer with gold . The mother was ever decent in language , in manners , and in morals ,

and strove gallantly for her children . J . hat they could read and write , and had some taste for ' such pursuits , was duo to her ; for the father , as years passed over him , and ' as ho became more and more hardened to the rough usages of a digger ' s life , fell

gradually into tho habits of a mere miner . A year before his death no one would have thought he had been tho son of Fergus Baird , ' Esq ., of Killach , and thafc when he had married the daughter of a neighbouring laird , things had smiled pleasantly on him and his young wife .

Then his wife died , and he followed her within one year . Of the horrors of that twelve months it is useless now to tell . A man's passion for drink , if ho be not wholly bad , may be moderated by a wife , and then pass all bounds when she is no longer there to restrain him . So it was with him ; and for a

while there was danger that it should be so with his boys also . Catherine was the eldest "daughter , and was then twenty-two . There . was . a brother older , then four younger , and after them threo other girls . That year to Catherine was very hard , —too

hard , almost , for endurance . But there came among them at the diggings , where they were still dwelling , a young man whose name was John Carmichael , whose presence there " •avo something of grace to her days . Ho , too , had come for gold ,

Catherine Carmichael ; Or, Three Years Running .

and had joined himself to the Bairds in consequence of some distant family friendship . Within twelve months the father ofthe famil y had followed tho mother , and the eight children wore left without protection and without anything in the world worthy of the name of

propert )** . The sons could fight for themselves , and were loft to do so . The three younger children were carried back to Scotland , a sister of their mother ' s having undertaken to maintain them ; but Catherine was left . VVhen the time came in which the threo

younger sisters wero sent , it was found that a homo presented itself , for Catherine ; and as the burden of providing for even the younger orphans was very great , it was thought proper that Catherine should avail herself of tho home which was offered her .

John Carmichael , when ho came among the diggers at Hokitika , —on tho western coast of tho southern of the two New Zealand islands , —had dono so ehie'ly because he had quarrelled with his cousin , Peter Carmichael , a squatter settled across the mountains in the Canterbury Province , with whom he had been

living for the last three or four years . Tin ' s Peter Carmichael . who is now nearly fifty , had for many years been closely connected with Baird , and at ouo period had been in parfnorship

with him at the diggings . John had heard of Baird and Hokitika , and when the quarrel had become , as ho thought , unbearable , he had left tho Canterbury sheep-farm , and had tried his fortune in a , gold-gully .

Then Baird died , and what friends there were laid thero heads together to see how best the famil y should bo maintained . The boys , and John Carmichael with them , would stick to tho gold . Word came out from tho aunt in Scotland that SIIG would do what was needed . Let the burden not be made t < > o heavy

for her . If ifc wore found necessary to send children home , let them , if possible , be young . Peter Carmichael himself en mo across the mountains to Hokitika , and nrrnnsred thin <> -s for the

journey;—and before lie left , he had arranged things also for Catherine . Catherine should go with him across the mountains , and livo with him at Mount Warriwa-, —as his homo was called , — - and bo his wife .

Catherine found everything to be settled for her almost ' •before she was able to say a word as to her own desire in the matter . It was so evident that she could not be allowed to increase the weight of the burden which was to bo imposed upon the aunt at home ! It was so evident that her brothers wero

not able to nnd a home for her ! It was so evident thafc sho could not livo alone in that wild country ! And it seemed also to be quite evident that John Carmichael had no proposition of his own to make to her ! Peter Carmichael was odious to her , but the time was such that she could not allow herself (<> think of her own dislikin < - * s .

There never had been a word of overt outspoken love between John Carmichael and Catherine Baird . The two wero nearly of an age , and , as such , the girl had seemed to be theelder . They had como to be friends more loving than any other thafc either had . Catherine , in those gloomy days , in

which she had seen her father perishing and her brothers too often straying * iu the wrong path , had had much need of a friend . And he had been good to her , keeping himself to sober , hard-working ways , because he-might so best assist her

in her difficulties . And she had trusted him , begging him to watch over tho hoys , aud to help her with tlie girls . Her conduct had been beyond all praise ; and he also , —for her sake following IWY example , —had been good . Of course she had

loved him , but of . course she had not said so , as ho liad not chosen to speak firsfc . Then had coiiie the second death and the disruption . The elder Carmichael had come over , and had taken things into his own hands . He was known to be a very hard man , but never-

“The Freemason: 1885-12-21, Page 1” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 10 Sept. 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fvl/issues/fvl_21121885/page/1/.
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Catherine Carmichael ; or, Three Years Running . Article 1
CHAPTER II. Article 3
CHAPTER III. Article 6
Masonic Ellphabet. Article 8
Our Model Stage Manager. Article 8
Untitled Ad 8
CHAPTER II. Article 9
Untitled Ad 9
Untitled Ad 10
CHAPTER III. Article 11
Untitled Ad 11
Untitled Ad 12
Closing Ode. Article 13
Engraved Lists of Lodges. Article 13
Untitled Ad 13
Untitled Ad 14
Untitled Ad 15
Told by a Lodge Register. Article 16
Untitled Ad 16
Untitled Ad 17
Untitled Ad 18
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Untitled Ad 21
The Stranger Brother. Article 22
MESSRS. WELFORD AND SONS (LIMITED). Article 22
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RETTICH'S IMPROVED MITRAILLEUSE LAMP. Article 23
Shopping. Article 23
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Catherine Carmichael ; Or, Three Years Running .

Catherine Carmichael ; or , Three Years Running .

BY ANTHONY" TROLLOPtt .

CEIAPTKH J .

Cin ; is * nus DAY . NO . 1 .

A T II E lt IN E C A R M 10 HAE L , whoso name is prefixed to tin ' s story , was very early in her life made acquainted with trouble . That name became hers when she was married , but tlio reader

must first know her as Catherine Baird . Her father was a Scotch-» man of gootl birth , and A had once been possessed

of fair means . But tho world had gone against him , and ho had taken his family out to New

Zealand when Catherine was as yet but ton years old . Of Mr . Baird and his misfortunes little need be said , except that for nearly ' a dozen years he followed the precarious and demoralizing * trade of a gold-digger at Hokitika . Sometimes there was money in plenty , sometimes there was none .

Pood thero was , always plenty , though food of the roughest . Drink thero was , generally , much more than plenty ; Everything around the young . Bairds was rough . Frequently changing thoir residence from ono shanty to another , the last shanty inhabited by them would always be tho roughest .

As for the common decencies of life , they seem to become ever scarcer and more scarce with them , although the females among them had a taste for decency , and although they lived in a region which then seemed to be running oyer with gold . The mother was ever decent in language , in manners , and in morals ,

and strove gallantly for her children . J . hat they could read and write , and had some taste for ' such pursuits , was duo to her ; for the father , as years passed over him , and ' as ho became more and more hardened to the rough usages of a digger ' s life , fell

gradually into tho habits of a mere miner . A year before his death no one would have thought he had been tho son of Fergus Baird , ' Esq ., of Killach , and thafc when he had married the daughter of a neighbouring laird , things had smiled pleasantly on him and his young wife .

Then his wife died , and he followed her within one year . Of the horrors of that twelve months it is useless now to tell . A man's passion for drink , if ho be not wholly bad , may be moderated by a wife , and then pass all bounds when she is no longer there to restrain him . So it was with him ; and for a

while there was danger that it should be so with his boys also . Catherine was the eldest "daughter , and was then twenty-two . There . was . a brother older , then four younger , and after them threo other girls . That year to Catherine was very hard , —too

hard , almost , for endurance . But there came among them at the diggings , where they were still dwelling , a young man whose name was John Carmichael , whose presence there " •avo something of grace to her days . Ho , too , had come for gold ,

Catherine Carmichael ; Or, Three Years Running .

and had joined himself to the Bairds in consequence of some distant family friendship . Within twelve months the father ofthe famil y had followed tho mother , and the eight children wore left without protection and without anything in the world worthy of the name of

propert )** . The sons could fight for themselves , and were loft to do so . The three younger children were carried back to Scotland , a sister of their mother ' s having undertaken to maintain them ; but Catherine was left . VVhen the time came in which the threo

younger sisters wero sent , it was found that a homo presented itself , for Catherine ; and as the burden of providing for even the younger orphans was very great , it was thought proper that Catherine should avail herself of tho home which was offered her .

John Carmichael , when ho came among the diggers at Hokitika , —on tho western coast of tho southern of the two New Zealand islands , —had dono so ehie'ly because he had quarrelled with his cousin , Peter Carmichael , a squatter settled across the mountains in the Canterbury Province , with whom he had been

living for the last three or four years . Tin ' s Peter Carmichael . who is now nearly fifty , had for many years been closely connected with Baird , and at ouo period had been in parfnorship

with him at the diggings . John had heard of Baird and Hokitika , and when the quarrel had become , as ho thought , unbearable , he had left tho Canterbury sheep-farm , and had tried his fortune in a , gold-gully .

Then Baird died , and what friends there were laid thero heads together to see how best the famil y should bo maintained . The boys , and John Carmichael with them , would stick to tho gold . Word came out from tho aunt in Scotland that SIIG would do what was needed . Let the burden not be made t < > o heavy

for her . If ifc wore found necessary to send children home , let them , if possible , be young . Peter Carmichael himself en mo across the mountains to Hokitika , and nrrnnsred thin <> -s for the

journey;—and before lie left , he had arranged things also for Catherine . Catherine should go with him across the mountains , and livo with him at Mount Warriwa-, —as his homo was called , — - and bo his wife .

Catherine found everything to be settled for her almost ' •before she was able to say a word as to her own desire in the matter . It was so evident that she could not be allowed to increase the weight of the burden which was to bo imposed upon the aunt at home ! It was so evident that her brothers wero

not able to nnd a home for her ! It was so evident thafc sho could not livo alone in that wild country ! And it seemed also to be quite evident that John Carmichael had no proposition of his own to make to her ! Peter Carmichael was odious to her , but the time was such that she could not allow herself (<> think of her own dislikin < - * s .

There never had been a word of overt outspoken love between John Carmichael and Catherine Baird . The two wero nearly of an age , and , as such , the girl had seemed to be theelder . They had como to be friends more loving than any other thafc either had . Catherine , in those gloomy days , in

which she had seen her father perishing and her brothers too often straying * iu the wrong path , had had much need of a friend . And he had been good to her , keeping himself to sober , hard-working ways , because he-might so best assist her

in her difficulties . And she had trusted him , begging him to watch over tho hoys , aud to help her with tlie girls . Her conduct had been beyond all praise ; and he also , —for her sake following IWY example , —had been good . Of course she had

loved him , but of . course she had not said so , as ho liad not chosen to speak firsfc . Then had coiiie the second death and the disruption . The elder Carmichael had come over , and had taken things into his own hands . He was known to be a very hard man , but never-

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