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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.
How We Kept Christmas In An Old Manor House
How we kept Christmas in an Old Manor House
fnif PROPOSE in the following little story , to relate fcho I || iucidouts of Christmas in an old manor house , alas , ftS p far away , and in a good year of " auld lang syne " II long sinco departed to the grave of time ! Idonot JMP- suppose , indeed I am sure , thafc I have nothing new ' 1 to tell , nothing exciting to relate . Nothing weird or sensational belongs to this humdrum relation of a distant Christmas in an old manor house some years back . But still , as a story is wanted for Brother
Kenning ' s Christmas Freemason , I have , jotted dowu , from a dusty memorandum book , the account which I now present to my many indulgent readers ! And if afc tho end some kind critic or some astute commentator may propound the theory that " there is , after all , very little in it ; " lot all such bear in mind that , like Canning's " Needy Knifegrinder , " I preface all I hare
now to tell with that well -used line , '' Story ? God bless you ; I have news to tell , sir . " Those of us who in other days for their own pleasure and improvement road and thought over " Braccbridgc Hall , " the kindly creation of the pleasantesfc of writers , Washington Irving ; or thoso who can still amusedly recall to mind how , as told in the confessions of tlio immortal Pickwick , Mr .
Wardle kept np Christmas at Dingley Dell , thoy , I repeat , will need no words of mine to enhance the gratifying thoughts and exhilarating emotions thoso skilful " scribes " succeeded in extracting and ponrtraying in respect to Christmas . To them as to many more Christmastidc was a genial and goodly season , and they have certainly developed with unmatched fervour all that
sentiment can concede and all that affection can endow , and all that religion can hallow in respect of our longkept clearly-cherished Christmas Season ! I cannot presume , or venture even to hope , to follow ou theso goodly and well-drawn " lines . " I can only come after at a humble , very humble distance , indeed , and if for common mortals like myself 1 can oven succeed in arresting
attention for a moment , or endowing Christinas , so well known to us , with something of attraction , sentiment , and remembrance , however light or evanescent , I shall have indeed succeeded beyond what , my most ardent imagination would cither couceivo or compass . So , without further preface , as "there goes tho prompter's call , " let us draw up the curtain and begin .
I am ono of thoso who believe in Christmas , deeply , lovingly , reverentially , fully . Some do not ; I always have so done , and always shall so do . To how many is Christmas the happy cud for a short breathing space of toilsome duties and cankering cares ! How many a trouble is lightened , how many a trial is
softened , how many a cross is moro patiently borno in the long , longing hope of rc-mceting those wo lovo so dearly , and yet from whom wo aro severed for long and weary mouths by the pursuits of business , tho claims of office , tho needs , the callings , tho responsibilities of life !
In some sweltering city office , behind some tedious desk high and hard , amid tho throes of calculations and the excitement of speculation , through tho long , dreary routine of absorbing and often painful occupation , surrounded by affluence and comfort , or working ou , lonely and unappreciated anil even maligned—in all those various ways—to how very many is Christmas the
" Ultima Thule " of the year ' s difficult struggles , dangerous deceits , engrossing success , or overmastering weakness , and littleness , and baseness . Then for a few short days , even hours , care is hushed , oven probably forgotten , and wealth antl poverty , rank and nothingness , for a little time stand upon tho same and ono level , and in tho " amends " offered for life ' s
inequalities , grievances , hard work , and limited means in tho full title of revived Christmas affection , interest , and sympathy , memory becomes for tho nonco oblivious , and the heart becomes elato again . Alas ! short-lived happiness ' or ns poor mortals . Still thcro it is , aud such as it is let us hug it to onr bosoms , and feuce it round from thc rude blasts of earthly " Simoons . " As
poor King Stanislas said at a Christmas gathering in Poland , over 100 years ago , " Cost si doux do se tromper quolque fois "— "It's so pleasant to deceive yourself sometimes !" As it will thou bo seen from what I have just written , I am a lover of tho old form and quaint habit , and tho now unfashionable ways of keeping Christmas .
I cherish , for one , all those local customs which innocent hilarity and hearty hospitality have created and preserved in various parts of England , and I , like many a brother archaeologist , always welcome those scattered reminiscences of the past which still survive railways and the march of improvement , and lectures and lecturers and penny newspapers and gasand tho
, , electric light and the telephone , and which are so dear to the antiquary , yes , and tho man of sense aud education . Apsley Manor House , in tho timo I write of , was a good and comfortable relic of other days . Ifc had never been much larger than it was then , and possessed certain features which would now make it invaluable to
collectors , and inevitably entail several addresses from a local archreological society . It was approached from tho high road between two great stone pillars , each with a " peacock" and tho shield , the arms of tho Apsley ' s—a " cross fleurie , " and the somewhat narrow road from tho gates , by a dexterous turn , brought you " if » small g £ to which led over a moat , on a broad walk , through the centre of a garden to the old porch .
How We Kept Christmas In An Old Manor House
A later squire had added a little porter ' s lodge to the old-fashioned gates , bufc by a skilful disposition of goodly trees , the manor house was quite screened on on both sides of its front , and in its entirety from the road . Over the gabled porch fche arms were repeated , and when , after striking the old knocker , you were admitted into the hall , through two magnificent oak
doors , you admired at onco the effect and the appropriateness of the old-fashioned arrangements , for you were standing iu a sort of ante-chamber , ou which stained glass threw a pleasant , if fanciful , colouring , aud you saw a long screen which shut yon out from a goodly hall . There very wisely tho family " lived" as we say , and as some former squire had built on a large
wing at the west ( the honse laced south ) , you could at onco reach a waiting room , a library , and a billiard mom , aud the bachelor gallery by easy access . When you wero admitted into the hall you were struck wifch its pleasant proportions , its quaint fireplace , its oriels , and stained glass fragments , and its noble oak staircase to the principal bedrooms . The drawing-room ,
the original soler of old houses , led into the diningroom , a most lovable room , hung round with Spanish leather ( a young lady once actually called ifc a " duck of a room " ) , and thus the house was as comfortable and convenient a house as can well be described or represented wifch the cunning pencil of even tho most skilful artist .
The hall was the scene of our revels , and our games , high jinks , aud enviable romps . To-day time and change have reduced that happy family party to smaller proportions ; many are the missing facos aud empty chairs . But I am speaking of a day ere thc inevitable mischances , aud visitations , and bard blows of earth had dimmed the bright hopes and warm hearts of fairest youth , or rendered old age sedate and sad in
recollections which aro full of grief , and in losses which can never be replaced ! What a good idea we had then of keeping Christmas , as it had been kept up , for long years , through a kindly and gentle succession of true-hearted aud pleasantlooking Apsloys , male and female . Tho old adage was familiar to all the inhabitants of Cropshire : You may search thc county round
But an ill-looking Apsley can't bc found . Such was tho firm belief of every well-kept cottage and farmhouse on the manor of Apsloy and in tho peaceful villages of Apsley Guise and Apsley Parva , of Nethorton and Hawloigh , and Haver and Toft ! And there was much truth in the" saying . If tho old housekeeper indeed began her mincemeat
on tho Monday after " Stirup Sunday , " and sundry preparations were looked to constantly and carefully on tho well-stocked manor farm by Mr . Jennings , the substantial and honest bailiff , it was the week before Christinas that ushered in tho scenes of excitement and noise , aud gay voices and silvery cries iu that old hall . Then tho Captain came ( if in England ) from his
regiment , or tho First-Lieutenaut from his ship . Then a learned and lucid young Barrister hurried down from the Temple ; and the eldest son appeared , a well-known M . P ., from his London Club . Then Mrs . Marleigh antl Mrs . Carruthers , married women with good-looking husbands and children ! and Mary Apsley and Lucy Apsloy , still unmarried , appeared prettier and more
demure than ever . And there wore one or two very attractive female cousins , to whom tho young men paid groat attention ; and a maiden aunt , and a kind old grandmother , to whom all ofl ' ored thoir obeisances ; and when to this you add the noise of sundry small fry , children , grand-children , mule cousins , and friends—you have a house full of as happy mortals as can bo found
in this good old laud ! And then tho Squire , erect in his manliness and pleasant presence , aud his stately and gracious " Ladye , " kiud , attentive , and considerate to all , mado up a scene that you may go far and wide and you will not see tho like , I make bold to aver , for many a long mile , or many a long day ! Oh , how those old rafters then rung with song , and quip , and joke , and
merriment , the gay laughter of tho " maiden fair , " the screams of delighted children , and the moro mellow echoes of matured amusement and a happy and radiant old ago ! As I write to-day I feol somewhat sad , using an author ' s privilege , as I add , that of that gay crowd , many , far too many , can smile , or sing , or laugh no
more . They have left earthly happiness , homo affection , behind . Somo are in peaceful resting-places at home , one has found a soldier ' s grave in Afghanistan Tho good old squire and his kind and excellent helpmate aro lying in the old mausoleum , and tho grandmother and tho maiden aunt have also passed away . A uow " regime " boars sway , and the M . P . and his
graceful wife aro keeping up now the hospitality and prestige of the Apsleys . Bufc then , little was thought of tho morrow , or recked what tho future might bring forth . On Christmas day the whole party went to churchduly decorated by fair hands—and after church the long procession of all ranks returned to the old hall .
Tho dinner was early on Christmas day , for fcho children dinod with the elders ( a very good custom ) , and in the evening the family festivities began , though tho Christmas danco was kept , if possible , fcho next day . For a long timo tho library , a goodly room , had beon
a sacrod spot , but when tho band of pianoforte and cornet , and violin aud violoncello struck up a triumphal march , the carefully-ordered procession wended its way within those mystic procints , where the Christmas Tree stood in its brightness , and kindliness , and grace . All the servants and farm labourers , and their wives
How We Kept Christmas In An Old Manor House
and children , were there . No one waa afc home except the old and infirm , aud , as the Captain used to say , the " squalling brats "; and this ono tie of family union tended to keop servants and retainers in the Apsley family through long years , when some neighbours were always complaining , and changing theirs week by week . And there w-as a present for all . Nono wore forgotten ,
from the highest to the lowest—from the oldest to the youngest . Ah , well , those were happy days , and the world seems to me to have grown more severed , somehow , than then , bufc I know , whatever ifc maybe to day , no happier party ever met , uo more smiling facos over were seon , than those who , in innocent gaiety and frolic and laughter , amid
tho outspoken aud glowing emotions of undimmed days spent that Christmastide at A psloy Manor . I almost think I cau seo them now ; fche old squire standing with his back to the fire , laughing and approving , his kindly and goodly dame bonding to her old mother , as she went on knitting , and nodding , and smiling ; the maiden aunt becoming sentimental again
with the old clergyman ( an old attachment ); and over ifc all came tho silvery laugh of girlhood , or the uproar of vociferous children , as tho soldier , and the sailor , and tho Templar , and the staid miss , and the married men and faithful wives , and audacious cousins forgot thoir dignity and became almost children again , up to any practical joke , the leaders of those joyous and
harmless revels
It was a goodly sight the old hall presented , and which even uow seems before me iu its picturesque details . Tho old family pictures seemed to smile with approval ; tho mon in armour at the corners appeared to
share benignly the din and indecorum , while the staid elders and their dames , and the more elastic cavaliers and their low-drcsscd beauties , tho stiller formalities of William and Mary , of Anno , aud the George ' s , actually looked as if they would step out of their canvas and danco a " minuet de la cour . "
At midnight the revels ceased . As tho last chimes died away , tho old squiro , lifting a loving cup to his lips , pronounced those tender words , " Goodnight . God bless you , all ! " In a few- moments the hall was deserted and still , save for tho ticking of tho great clock , and
tho cracklings of tho expiring embers iu the grate . Many years havo passed away since I spent my Christmas amid friends so kind , and associations so agreeable , bufc I thought it might do good to some of us if I ventured to recall from the past those reminiscences of a vanished Christmas .
As tho world grows older wo seem to grow colder ; and so many are the severances of life that , wo come often to believe that , as wo load such distinct lives here , no law of amity and lovo runs through tho busy associations of humanity . But , as Princo Albert ono said so well , so wisely , and so truly— " Tho happiness of tho most contrasted classes
is over identical " hero , after all , and I have taken up my pou at this Christmas season of 1880 , and in good feeling to my friend , Bro . Kenning , to express my hope that Christmas will make us remember , as Freemasonry teaches us all , that wo aro of ono family , after all , and so , perhaps , wo may like to try and help the poor
and needy , and keep our Christmas well , in feelings of sympathy and interest for servants and dependants , those wo employ , those wo aro bound to look after , as well as by remembering that , amid all our happiness , somo aro not so blessed , or comfortable as we are . T . T .
Sprigs Of Holly.
Sprigs of Holly .
lHHPRIGS of Holly , Sprigs of Holly , gH | fi Gather in , and all be jolly , — « j S ~* f Christmas comes onco more : f if |[ Ivy with your Holly weave , TTT Christinas is no time to grieve , I ' ' When good things aro in store . Old Father Christinas drawoth nigh , Then do not greet him wifch a sigh , Ho comes to make us glad : Good tidings to us he doth bring , Then make him welcome as the Spring ,
And cheer each heart that s sad . With Sprigs of Holly deck each home , Christmas is no timo to roam ,
When snownakes thickly fall : Bring offerings to tho poor man ' s cot , Lot poverty not bo forgot , When plenty fills the hall .
Your Holly Sprigs , with berries red , Will brighter seem above your head When happiness you give : Then for His sake , who came to bless And give us all true happiness , Do like Him while you live .
Sprigs of Holly , Sprigs of Holly , Gather in , and all bo jolly , Christmas comes once more : Ivy with your Holly weave , Christmas is no time to grieve , When good things are in store . E . T
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.
How We Kept Christmas In An Old Manor House
How we kept Christmas in an Old Manor House
fnif PROPOSE in the following little story , to relate fcho I || iucidouts of Christmas in an old manor house , alas , ftS p far away , and in a good year of " auld lang syne " II long sinco departed to the grave of time ! Idonot JMP- suppose , indeed I am sure , thafc I have nothing new ' 1 to tell , nothing exciting to relate . Nothing weird or sensational belongs to this humdrum relation of a distant Christmas in an old manor house some years back . But still , as a story is wanted for Brother
Kenning ' s Christmas Freemason , I have , jotted dowu , from a dusty memorandum book , the account which I now present to my many indulgent readers ! And if afc tho end some kind critic or some astute commentator may propound the theory that " there is , after all , very little in it ; " lot all such bear in mind that , like Canning's " Needy Knifegrinder , " I preface all I hare
now to tell with that well -used line , '' Story ? God bless you ; I have news to tell , sir . " Those of us who in other days for their own pleasure and improvement road and thought over " Braccbridgc Hall , " the kindly creation of the pleasantesfc of writers , Washington Irving ; or thoso who can still amusedly recall to mind how , as told in the confessions of tlio immortal Pickwick , Mr .
Wardle kept np Christmas at Dingley Dell , thoy , I repeat , will need no words of mine to enhance the gratifying thoughts and exhilarating emotions thoso skilful " scribes " succeeded in extracting and ponrtraying in respect to Christmas . To them as to many more Christmastidc was a genial and goodly season , and they have certainly developed with unmatched fervour all that
sentiment can concede and all that affection can endow , and all that religion can hallow in respect of our longkept clearly-cherished Christmas Season ! I cannot presume , or venture even to hope , to follow ou theso goodly and well-drawn " lines . " I can only come after at a humble , very humble distance , indeed , and if for common mortals like myself 1 can oven succeed in arresting
attention for a moment , or endowing Christinas , so well known to us , with something of attraction , sentiment , and remembrance , however light or evanescent , I shall have indeed succeeded beyond what , my most ardent imagination would cither couceivo or compass . So , without further preface , as "there goes tho prompter's call , " let us draw up the curtain and begin .
I am ono of thoso who believe in Christmas , deeply , lovingly , reverentially , fully . Some do not ; I always have so done , and always shall so do . To how many is Christmas the happy cud for a short breathing space of toilsome duties and cankering cares ! How many a trouble is lightened , how many a trial is
softened , how many a cross is moro patiently borno in the long , longing hope of rc-mceting those wo lovo so dearly , and yet from whom wo aro severed for long and weary mouths by the pursuits of business , tho claims of office , tho needs , the callings , tho responsibilities of life !
In some sweltering city office , behind some tedious desk high and hard , amid tho throes of calculations and the excitement of speculation , through tho long , dreary routine of absorbing and often painful occupation , surrounded by affluence and comfort , or working ou , lonely and unappreciated anil even maligned—in all those various ways—to how very many is Christmas the
" Ultima Thule " of the year ' s difficult struggles , dangerous deceits , engrossing success , or overmastering weakness , and littleness , and baseness . Then for a few short days , even hours , care is hushed , oven probably forgotten , and wealth antl poverty , rank and nothingness , for a little time stand upon tho same and ono level , and in tho " amends " offered for life ' s
inequalities , grievances , hard work , and limited means in tho full title of revived Christmas affection , interest , and sympathy , memory becomes for tho nonco oblivious , and the heart becomes elato again . Alas ! short-lived happiness ' or ns poor mortals . Still thcro it is , aud such as it is let us hug it to onr bosoms , and feuce it round from thc rude blasts of earthly " Simoons . " As
poor King Stanislas said at a Christmas gathering in Poland , over 100 years ago , " Cost si doux do se tromper quolque fois "— "It's so pleasant to deceive yourself sometimes !" As it will thou bo seen from what I have just written , I am a lover of tho old form and quaint habit , and tho now unfashionable ways of keeping Christmas .
I cherish , for one , all those local customs which innocent hilarity and hearty hospitality have created and preserved in various parts of England , and I , like many a brother archaeologist , always welcome those scattered reminiscences of the past which still survive railways and the march of improvement , and lectures and lecturers and penny newspapers and gasand tho
, , electric light and the telephone , and which are so dear to the antiquary , yes , and tho man of sense aud education . Apsley Manor House , in tho timo I write of , was a good and comfortable relic of other days . Ifc had never been much larger than it was then , and possessed certain features which would now make it invaluable to
collectors , and inevitably entail several addresses from a local archreological society . It was approached from tho high road between two great stone pillars , each with a " peacock" and tho shield , the arms of tho Apsley ' s—a " cross fleurie , " and the somewhat narrow road from tho gates , by a dexterous turn , brought you " if » small g £ to which led over a moat , on a broad walk , through the centre of a garden to the old porch .
How We Kept Christmas In An Old Manor House
A later squire had added a little porter ' s lodge to the old-fashioned gates , bufc by a skilful disposition of goodly trees , the manor house was quite screened on on both sides of its front , and in its entirety from the road . Over the gabled porch fche arms were repeated , and when , after striking the old knocker , you were admitted into the hall , through two magnificent oak
doors , you admired at onco the effect and the appropriateness of the old-fashioned arrangements , for you were standing iu a sort of ante-chamber , ou which stained glass threw a pleasant , if fanciful , colouring , aud you saw a long screen which shut yon out from a goodly hall . There very wisely tho family " lived" as we say , and as some former squire had built on a large
wing at the west ( the honse laced south ) , you could at onco reach a waiting room , a library , and a billiard mom , aud the bachelor gallery by easy access . When you wero admitted into the hall you were struck wifch its pleasant proportions , its quaint fireplace , its oriels , and stained glass fragments , and its noble oak staircase to the principal bedrooms . The drawing-room ,
the original soler of old houses , led into the diningroom , a most lovable room , hung round with Spanish leather ( a young lady once actually called ifc a " duck of a room " ) , and thus the house was as comfortable and convenient a house as can well be described or represented wifch the cunning pencil of even tho most skilful artist .
The hall was the scene of our revels , and our games , high jinks , aud enviable romps . To-day time and change have reduced that happy family party to smaller proportions ; many are the missing facos aud empty chairs . But I am speaking of a day ere thc inevitable mischances , aud visitations , and bard blows of earth had dimmed the bright hopes and warm hearts of fairest youth , or rendered old age sedate and sad in
recollections which aro full of grief , and in losses which can never be replaced ! What a good idea we had then of keeping Christmas , as it had been kept up , for long years , through a kindly and gentle succession of true-hearted aud pleasantlooking Apsloys , male and female . Tho old adage was familiar to all the inhabitants of Cropshire : You may search thc county round
But an ill-looking Apsley can't bc found . Such was tho firm belief of every well-kept cottage and farmhouse on the manor of Apsloy and in tho peaceful villages of Apsley Guise and Apsley Parva , of Nethorton and Hawloigh , and Haver and Toft ! And there was much truth in the" saying . If tho old housekeeper indeed began her mincemeat
on tho Monday after " Stirup Sunday , " and sundry preparations were looked to constantly and carefully on tho well-stocked manor farm by Mr . Jennings , the substantial and honest bailiff , it was the week before Christinas that ushered in tho scenes of excitement and noise , aud gay voices and silvery cries iu that old hall . Then tho Captain came ( if in England ) from his
regiment , or tho First-Lieutenaut from his ship . Then a learned and lucid young Barrister hurried down from the Temple ; and the eldest son appeared , a well-known M . P ., from his London Club . Then Mrs . Marleigh antl Mrs . Carruthers , married women with good-looking husbands and children ! and Mary Apsley and Lucy Apsloy , still unmarried , appeared prettier and more
demure than ever . And there wore one or two very attractive female cousins , to whom tho young men paid groat attention ; and a maiden aunt , and a kind old grandmother , to whom all ofl ' ored thoir obeisances ; and when to this you add the noise of sundry small fry , children , grand-children , mule cousins , and friends—you have a house full of as happy mortals as can bo found
in this good old laud ! And then tho Squire , erect in his manliness and pleasant presence , aud his stately and gracious " Ladye , " kiud , attentive , and considerate to all , mado up a scene that you may go far and wide and you will not see tho like , I make bold to aver , for many a long mile , or many a long day ! Oh , how those old rafters then rung with song , and quip , and joke , and
merriment , the gay laughter of tho " maiden fair , " the screams of delighted children , and the moro mellow echoes of matured amusement and a happy and radiant old ago ! As I write to-day I feol somewhat sad , using an author ' s privilege , as I add , that of that gay crowd , many , far too many , can smile , or sing , or laugh no
more . They have left earthly happiness , homo affection , behind . Somo are in peaceful resting-places at home , one has found a soldier ' s grave in Afghanistan Tho good old squire and his kind and excellent helpmate aro lying in the old mausoleum , and tho grandmother and tho maiden aunt have also passed away . A uow " regime " boars sway , and the M . P . and his
graceful wife aro keeping up now the hospitality and prestige of the Apsleys . Bufc then , little was thought of tho morrow , or recked what tho future might bring forth . On Christmas day the whole party went to churchduly decorated by fair hands—and after church the long procession of all ranks returned to the old hall .
Tho dinner was early on Christmas day , for fcho children dinod with the elders ( a very good custom ) , and in the evening the family festivities began , though tho Christmas danco was kept , if possible , fcho next day . For a long timo tho library , a goodly room , had beon
a sacrod spot , but when tho band of pianoforte and cornet , and violin aud violoncello struck up a triumphal march , the carefully-ordered procession wended its way within those mystic procints , where the Christmas Tree stood in its brightness , and kindliness , and grace . All the servants and farm labourers , and their wives
How We Kept Christmas In An Old Manor House
and children , were there . No one waa afc home except the old and infirm , aud , as the Captain used to say , the " squalling brats "; and this ono tie of family union tended to keop servants and retainers in the Apsley family through long years , when some neighbours were always complaining , and changing theirs week by week . And there w-as a present for all . Nono wore forgotten ,
from the highest to the lowest—from the oldest to the youngest . Ah , well , those were happy days , and the world seems to me to have grown more severed , somehow , than then , bufc I know , whatever ifc maybe to day , no happier party ever met , uo more smiling facos over were seon , than those who , in innocent gaiety and frolic and laughter , amid
tho outspoken aud glowing emotions of undimmed days spent that Christmastide at A psloy Manor . I almost think I cau seo them now ; fche old squire standing with his back to the fire , laughing and approving , his kindly and goodly dame bonding to her old mother , as she went on knitting , and nodding , and smiling ; the maiden aunt becoming sentimental again
with the old clergyman ( an old attachment ); and over ifc all came tho silvery laugh of girlhood , or the uproar of vociferous children , as tho soldier , and the sailor , and tho Templar , and the staid miss , and the married men and faithful wives , and audacious cousins forgot thoir dignity and became almost children again , up to any practical joke , the leaders of those joyous and
harmless revels
It was a goodly sight the old hall presented , and which even uow seems before me iu its picturesque details . Tho old family pictures seemed to smile with approval ; tho mon in armour at the corners appeared to
share benignly the din and indecorum , while the staid elders and their dames , and the more elastic cavaliers and their low-drcsscd beauties , tho stiller formalities of William and Mary , of Anno , aud the George ' s , actually looked as if they would step out of their canvas and danco a " minuet de la cour . "
At midnight the revels ceased . As tho last chimes died away , tho old squiro , lifting a loving cup to his lips , pronounced those tender words , " Goodnight . God bless you , all ! " In a few- moments the hall was deserted and still , save for tho ticking of tho great clock , and
tho cracklings of tho expiring embers iu the grate . Many years havo passed away since I spent my Christmas amid friends so kind , and associations so agreeable , bufc I thought it might do good to some of us if I ventured to recall from the past those reminiscences of a vanished Christmas .
As tho world grows older wo seem to grow colder ; and so many are the severances of life that , wo come often to believe that , as wo load such distinct lives here , no law of amity and lovo runs through tho busy associations of humanity . But , as Princo Albert ono said so well , so wisely , and so truly— " Tho happiness of tho most contrasted classes
is over identical " hero , after all , and I have taken up my pou at this Christmas season of 1880 , and in good feeling to my friend , Bro . Kenning , to express my hope that Christmas will make us remember , as Freemasonry teaches us all , that wo aro of ono family , after all , and so , perhaps , wo may like to try and help the poor
and needy , and keep our Christmas well , in feelings of sympathy and interest for servants and dependants , those wo employ , those wo aro bound to look after , as well as by remembering that , amid all our happiness , somo aro not so blessed , or comfortable as we are . T . T .
Sprigs Of Holly.
Sprigs of Holly .
lHHPRIGS of Holly , Sprigs of Holly , gH | fi Gather in , and all be jolly , — « j S ~* f Christmas comes onco more : f if |[ Ivy with your Holly weave , TTT Christinas is no time to grieve , I ' ' When good things aro in store . Old Father Christinas drawoth nigh , Then do not greet him wifch a sigh , Ho comes to make us glad : Good tidings to us he doth bring , Then make him welcome as the Spring ,
And cheer each heart that s sad . With Sprigs of Holly deck each home , Christmas is no timo to roam ,
When snownakes thickly fall : Bring offerings to tho poor man ' s cot , Lot poverty not bo forgot , When plenty fills the hall .
Your Holly Sprigs , with berries red , Will brighter seem above your head When happiness you give : Then for His sake , who came to bless And give us all true happiness , Do like Him while you live .
Sprigs of Holly , Sprigs of Holly , Gather in , and all bo jolly , Christmas comes once more : Ivy with your Holly weave , Christmas is no time to grieve , When good things are in store . E . T