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  • Dec. 25, 1880
  • Page 21
  • Peare, Good Will Iowards Men!
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The Freemason, Dec. 25, 1880: Page 21

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    Article The Builder's Bargain. ← Page 2 of 2
    Article Peare, Good Will Iowards Men! Page 1 of 1
    Article How I First Berame a Mason. Page 1 of 1
    Article How I First Berame a Mason. Page 1 of 1
    Article Christmastide. Page 1 of 1
Page 21

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

The Builder's Bargain.

" Ostend ! Now , sir ; look sharp for the boat , sir , if you want to get across to-night . I told the conductor to warn you at Aix , but you were so sound asleep . " * # * # * I scramble to the railway station at Dover as the Christmas bells are pealing through the frosty air . I run throug h Canterbury as the Cathedral chimes are tinklingly ringing out the glad tidings of great comfort

and joy— "Peace on earth and goodwill towards men ! " I arrive in Canonbury , London , as tho pudding , crowned with holly and wreathed in lambent flame , is being carried in procession to the board , surrounded by children , screamingly happy , who divide their attentions between tho smoking ball and newly returned papa . Is it the warmth and emotion of the welcome ,

is it too imprudent indulgence in tho turkey and ancillary sausages , is it tho pudding , or the mince pies , or the roast chestnuts , or tho old port , or the exertion of blind-man ' s-buff and hunt tho slipper- following on a hearty meal ; or is it the excitement of the subsequent round game and the singing and romping under the mislctoe ; or is it , after all , only thc fatigue of the

journey that makes mo so sleepy at night ? And yet wholesome fatignc should uot cause nightmare , but , dream I do and nightmarishly too—my beloved bedfellow oven—bufc I am sure groundless ! y—impeaches me of snoring until tho morning , and then comes happy dreamless sleep , succeeded by sweet composed prophetic vision , and in that imaginary vaticination I sec

the noble minster ou thc banks of thc grand old river gorgeously complete , solemnly , but oh ! how happily and auspiciously consecrated to tho Great Master ' s service—tho traditionary diabolical spell wholly broken —the superstitionsly regarded "derrick" harmlessly and for ever removed—and the accomplished artist who superintends tho happy consummation living , like

Cawdor ' s thnno was supposed prosperously to exist , nn honoured and a worthy gentleman—but that is to bo in tho far future , and lam now , when I dream , young , nnd in Canonbury , London , many years removed from tho completion of tho Rhenish Dom Kirche . I am dreaming dreams and seeing visions hundreds of miles from fair ( but odorous ) Cologne-upon-the-Rhine . It is but

in the year eighteen hundred and fifty and something , and my dear wife is , on this blessed boxing-day morning , airing the daily paper before the fire with which sho iudulges me , as a wayworn traveller , in the bedroom , and startles me by exclaiming—almost shrieking , as she quotes a heading— " ' Shocking accident at Cologne Cathedral ! ' Why you wore

there but tbo day before yesterday , my dear . " 1 start up in bed , snatch tho journal from her hand , and read , " Our special correspondent from Cologne briefly informs us of a terrible accident which occurred at tho Dom Kircho yesterday— -Christmas—morning . A stranger , habited in a red tourist suit , presenting himself with the necessary credentials , induced

the worthy and respected architect nnd esteemed citizen , Ilerr Grntzbaum , to accompany him to tho roof to inspect the works in progress . Tho accomplished Herr , in ascending one of tho uncompleted towers , tho better fo point out to his companion some of tho details of the structure , sought to support himself by tho croekolliiig work , but one of tho staples

unfortunately giving way beneath his grasp , he was precipitated many hundred feet fo the pavement below , whence he was taken np in a crushed mass , life being , of course , totally extinct . Death must have been instantaneous . The visitor hurriedly descended by tho ladders provided , and thc staircase , as far as completed , and at onco gave information to the people iu charge of the church .

It being Christmas morning , there wero no artificers engaged on the works . After having thus called attention to the tragedy , and paused on the plat / , to light the tobacco in the large china howl of an inordinately long pipo , the diluvium from which struck the passers by as

having a strong sulphurous odour , tho strange individual disappeared in the direction of the Railway Station !" As I sank back on thepillo . vs I involuntarily startled nn wife by a profane ejaculation . I exclaimed , " The U—v—I !" And I really believe it was . S . l' .

Peare, Good Will Iowards Men!

Peare , Good Will Iowards Men !

—* S ^ WUCH is the messa ge of each Christmas Day , jjfflS Such the glad truth Freemasonry would proclaim ; 5 ? S ^ y For us the hurrying years they melt away , ^ S S Her precepts still remain , thank God ! the same . Ill Iu vain the storms of earth , the " wreck of time , " Hopeless loud folly ' s curse , or persecution ' s cry ; Freomasonry ' s glad maxims , kind , sublime , Tho bigot ' s wrath , the scorncr ' s jests defy .

I ' o-day , ' mid fleeting dreams and faltering sense , 'Mid falsehood ' s brazen forehead and its shame ; When honest worth yields to inane pretence , Onr good old Craft upholds its honoured name . Unchanged by time , undaunted and erect , While empires pass and ruins strew tho ground , H yet unfurls its flag to mark and to protect

The Craft , wheree ' er on earth it may be found , Long may it flourish , may no foes assail , May it endure , survive , through good and ill , May its glad message ne ' er grow faint or fail—UNTO ALL MORTAL MKN PHAGE AND GOODWILL

How I First Berame A Mason.

How I First Berame a Mason .

ffiKSaT was a gusty , wild , wintry night ou Christmas eve , gtug some forty years ago . Nofc one of those conven-^ 5 »» tional Christmas eve ' s which we are apt " to asso-§ i ciate in our fancies with that sacred time . There 5 was no snow , or frost , or ice . Outsideallwas barren I ¦> and bl eak , and there was a cutting east wind , which , combined with a pelting rain , seemed to freeze your very marrow bones , and make you long for the comfort of a well-lighted and comfortably carpeted room , with

a blazing fire in it , and tho shutters closed . How it was in England that night I do not know , for I am writing about an episode which occurred in my life when I was in an important town iu Norway . I was a young man then , quite a youth in fact , being only about twenty-two . Up till then my life had been very happy . Roared in the charming little village of Bowuoss , whose

shores slope down to and are washed by the beautiful waters of Windermere , I had there passed the whole of my days until thatdato . Then I becamc-as many a cleverer youth than over I was has become—tired of my home , tired of my parent ' s gentle care , tired of the loving creature who had beon my companion from my boyish days , and who had consented to become my partner

through life , and ungrateful boy as I was had come off to this bleak , though , as I shall afterwards toll you , not inhospitable place , to make , as I fully expected , my fortune . It is very strange , but I havo always remarked when a boy leaves his home for the first time ho is always sanguiuo of making his fortune . Visions ever float before him of a ten years' labour and work ,

to be followed by a life of ease and rest amid the riches which ho shall have gathered to himself during his ten years of striving . Perhaps it is well that it should bo so . I believe mysolf that it ought to he so . When tho Great Architect of the Universe created man ho planted in his bosom a precious germ which lurks iu every man's bosom . No matter how despondent an

individual may ho ho will find that ho never loses this precious gift . That gift is hope , and I thank God from my heart that ho has always kept the lamp of hopo burning in my heart . But I am digressing , and some of my readers will say , " Oh , the writer of this is a garrulous old man , who wants to reatl us a long Christmas homily on ' Hope '" Not so , my friends ; I am not naturally

garrulous , so I will , with your permission , return to my narrative , and if it does not read so well as you would have liked it to read , yon must forgive an old man ' s failing powers . I will tell yon what had made mc choose this locality , which , nfc first , m .-iy npjxvir to yon strange nnd undesirable . I hail always had a desire to travel nnd see

now sights antl scones , and I had had a desire to make money . For sinco I had become engaged to my darling Ella my whole thoughts had centred on this one ideahow to attain to a state of affluence so as to maintain her in happiness . Her entreaties that I should stay at homo and live on the little plot of land which my forefathers had cultivated before me for generations , had

no weight whatever with me . A city friend , who had been staying with us in the summer , had fanned this flame of ambition within me , until I had como to look on my departure ns a sacred necessity . Ho told mo how several of his companions had gone over to Norway and wero doing well . After this nothing would satisfy me , bnt that 1 must go myself . And so 1 went . I will

not linger over the leave-takings . I am nn old man now , but the remembrance of that timo will always cling to me as long as I live . I loft tho home of my childhood in August , and I bad been hero for some three months . Things had gone badly with mo , for I had not got , employment , and as far as I could then seo was not likolv to get any for some time to come . A

very important reason kept me from returning home , ami that was lhat I had not . tho wherewithal ! to pay my passage . One thing after another had gone , and I was earnestly cogitating with myself whether it would bo justifiable to purl with a ring that I was wearing—lice ring . Header , have you ever been in that predicament ? If so you will be able to feel for me .

1 had wandered out that night down to tho quay , unable to stay in the house where tho other lodgers wore making merry over their yulctidc . 1 bad hastened out to try to forget my feelings . I was longing and praying that some gootl old Chcryble woultl como across my path and take pity on me , at least till 1 could earn enough money to take mo back to the dear

old place 1 had so ruthlessly cast from mo . Then my thoughts would take a new turn , and 1 would find myself speculating on what they wore doing at homo . I could imagine tho clean snntled floor , the yule log blazing in tho old " ingle nuke , " my parents sitting on each side , with the dear loving face in tho centre , which 1 would have given so much to have hud resting on my

shoulder once more . And 1 could imagine the immense round of beef on the table , flanked by the proverbial sweet pie and tho haver bread antl October-brewed . Then my thoughts wandered slowly back to myself , and I began to discover that I was cold antl wet , so I commenced fo retrace my steps amid coils of tarry rope antl barrels of strongly smelling fish . Away , up in the

town , I could hear the bells proclaiming the anniversary of the Saviour , and this nt any rate was real . I know that they at home would bo listening to the same sounds , and that we could all unite that winter ' s evening in thanking our God for past mercies , and praying for a happy meeting . I am a great believer in fate . I firmly believe that it was my fote to walk out that night on to thc old

How I First Berame A Mason.

quay , and to undergo the strange adventure I am about to relate , as I am of my own existence . At one spot they were loading a vessel , and as I passed , ono of the sailors threw out a rope , with whioh I came in violent contact , causing me to be knocked down . The force of tho blow stunned me for some time , and when I woke I was faint with pain . I had

been carried during my swoon into a strange building which I had often noticed afc the entrance to the pier , but to which I had never had the curiosity to ask for admission . Two or three kind , earnest , faces were bent over me when I recovered , and I was asked in gentle tones , such as a loving brother might have used , whether I felt myself much worse . Smarting with pain I tried

to rise to my feet , but the effort was too much for me , and I sank back exhausted . One of my newly-found friends applied some wine to my lips , whicli greatly revived me , and I was able to ask where I was , or what place I was in . A gentleman bending over me warned me that it would bo much better that I should maintain a perfect quiet , and advised me to endeavour to

obtain some sleep . But my excited state forbade such an idea , and after much entreaty never to divulge what I should see and hear , it was explained to me that I had been observed , when I met with my accident , by some of tho members as they were leaving their boat to attend a meeting of their lodge , aud true to the principles of universal charity inculcated by their

order they had conveyed me there , and had admimstei ed such restoratives ns they thought best . They explained to me that had there been another house near I should never have been brought there , as thoy were ahout to perforin ono of their most Solemn and impressive rites . Four brethren who were to sail on the morrow were to bo initiated , aud for this purpose the lodge bad

mot . I learnt afterwards thafc it was a "lodge of emergency" which had boon called for the occasion . One of the brethren sat by me whilst the beautiful and impressive ceremony was gone through , and in a low voice , modulated by a tender care , explained to mo tho meaning and aims of Freemasonry . When tho initiation of tho four novices was

completed , my friend , who had drawn from me my story , rose , nnd in kind and considerate language related it to his brethren , ending with a motion that as I had soon so much of tho lodge , it was but fair to themselves and mc that I should become a member , nnd moved that the venerable Master proceed with the initiation of his youthful brother , provided the brethren

in full lodgo assembled deemed it advisable . There being no dissentients , I was invited to make my approach to thc Master , which I did , and he read over to mo tho solemn nover-to-bc-forgotton words of the charge . Then liko one in a dream I was invested with t ) w Oiilcr ot Frcmnsonry , and my newly-found friends , and ns I could now call thorn brethren , came forward and

offered mo thoir hearty congratulations . Reader , my story is soon finished . I was taken homo to spend tho glad season of Christinas with tho brother who had proposed my initiation , nnd I found him over a brother to mc . I was , when I became strong again , introduced into his office , and as vacancies occurred by thoso above

me leaving or dying , I was promoted , until at Inst I bocame partner in ono of the first business houses in Copenhagen . Long sinco I married my darling , and aa I look nt my threo boys , brothers as well as sons , 1 am thankful for the stormy Christmas eve when I wandered on tho forsaken old quay , and became a Freemason . W . M . li .

Christmastide.

Christmastide .

* _> trt ^ vii , a pl ^ f ^ ERE is Christmas once again , e $ I * lijj Christmas with its smiling face , tfS ~^* Let ' s usher in tho happy reigu yflj Of Christmas kindness , Christmas grace m * With holly deck , with ivy wreathe

Each pleasant room and hall , Antl let each mystic motto breathe Welcome unto all .

Heap crackling logs upon the fire , Draw tho curtains , light tho tree , Let youth and old ago never tiro Of harmless kindly jollity .

Do not the nusletoo forget , Mysterious is its power , Let youth in sportive pastimes met

Enjoy the smiling hour . Collect true hearts ! tho calls resound , For tho well-decked board to-day ; Antl let tho kindly toast go round

" To dear friends far away . " Lot youth and ago , when now they meet , As loving hearts rejoice , In pleasant hours and converse sweet To greet affection ' s voice .

Oh ! happy scene—oh ! pleasant sight , May peace and lovo abide With age so kind , and youth so bright , In this their Christmastide . P .

“The Freemason: 1880-12-25, Page 21” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 19 Aug. 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fvl/issues/fvl_25121880/page/21/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
CONTENTS. Article 1
PROVINCIAL GRAND CHAPTER OF SOMERSET. Article 1
PROVINCIAL GRAND MARK LODGE OF SUSSEX. Article 1
FATHER AGNEW. Article 1
CHRISTMAS FESTIVITIES, PAST, PRESENT, AND FUTURE. Article 2
LODGE OF BENEVOLENCE. Article 2
Masonic Notes and Queries. Article 3
Reviews. Article 3
South Africa. Article 3
Ancient and Primitive Rite. Article 3
REPORTS OF MASONIC MEETINGS. Article 4
Royal Arch. Article 6
Mark Masonry. Article 6
Knights Templar. Article 6
Literary, Art, and Antiquarian Notes. Article 6
Masonic and General Tidings. Article 7
A MASON'S CHRISTMAS GREETING. Article 7
To Correspondents. Article 8
Untitled Article 8
WARM THANKS AND "HEARTY GOOD WISHES." Article 8
SUMMARY FOR 1880. Article 8
Original Correspondence. Article 11
METROPOLITAN MASONIC MEETINGS. Article 11
Births, Marriages, and Deaths. Article 12
Untitled Ad 12
Untitled Ad 12
Untitled Ad 12
A Chritmas and New Year's Greeting. Article 13
Our Christmas Areemason. Article 13
Christmas. Article 13
The Christmas Waits. Article 14
A Christmas Souveuir. Article 14
" Old Pyramid's" Christmas Day in the Drsert. Article 14
How we kept Christmas in an Old Manor House Article 17
Sprigs of Holly. Article 17
The Ugty Duckting. Article 18
The Sea-King. Article 19
The Builder's Bargain. Article 20
Peare, Good Will Iowards Men! Article 21
How I First Berame a Mason. Article 21
Christmastide. Article 21
The Mysterious Yisitor at Manston Hall. Article 22
Christmas Day. Article 22
How Podgers Lost his Christmas Dinner. Article 22
Pass the Bowl Round. Article 23
Hephsibah. Article 23
A Coutraband League. Article 24
Christmas Morning. Article 24
Harotd Suffiuan. Article 25
Good Bye.* Article 28
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

The Builder's Bargain.

" Ostend ! Now , sir ; look sharp for the boat , sir , if you want to get across to-night . I told the conductor to warn you at Aix , but you were so sound asleep . " * # * # * I scramble to the railway station at Dover as the Christmas bells are pealing through the frosty air . I run throug h Canterbury as the Cathedral chimes are tinklingly ringing out the glad tidings of great comfort

and joy— "Peace on earth and goodwill towards men ! " I arrive in Canonbury , London , as tho pudding , crowned with holly and wreathed in lambent flame , is being carried in procession to the board , surrounded by children , screamingly happy , who divide their attentions between tho smoking ball and newly returned papa . Is it the warmth and emotion of the welcome ,

is it too imprudent indulgence in tho turkey and ancillary sausages , is it tho pudding , or the mince pies , or the roast chestnuts , or tho old port , or the exertion of blind-man ' s-buff and hunt tho slipper- following on a hearty meal ; or is it the excitement of the subsequent round game and the singing and romping under the mislctoe ; or is it , after all , only thc fatigue of the

journey that makes mo so sleepy at night ? And yet wholesome fatignc should uot cause nightmare , but , dream I do and nightmarishly too—my beloved bedfellow oven—bufc I am sure groundless ! y—impeaches me of snoring until tho morning , and then comes happy dreamless sleep , succeeded by sweet composed prophetic vision , and in that imaginary vaticination I sec

the noble minster ou thc banks of thc grand old river gorgeously complete , solemnly , but oh ! how happily and auspiciously consecrated to tho Great Master ' s service—tho traditionary diabolical spell wholly broken —the superstitionsly regarded "derrick" harmlessly and for ever removed—and the accomplished artist who superintends tho happy consummation living , like

Cawdor ' s thnno was supposed prosperously to exist , nn honoured and a worthy gentleman—but that is to bo in tho far future , and lam now , when I dream , young , nnd in Canonbury , London , many years removed from tho completion of tho Rhenish Dom Kirche . I am dreaming dreams and seeing visions hundreds of miles from fair ( but odorous ) Cologne-upon-the-Rhine . It is but

in the year eighteen hundred and fifty and something , and my dear wife is , on this blessed boxing-day morning , airing the daily paper before the fire with which sho iudulges me , as a wayworn traveller , in the bedroom , and startles me by exclaiming—almost shrieking , as she quotes a heading— " ' Shocking accident at Cologne Cathedral ! ' Why you wore

there but tbo day before yesterday , my dear . " 1 start up in bed , snatch tho journal from her hand , and read , " Our special correspondent from Cologne briefly informs us of a terrible accident which occurred at tho Dom Kircho yesterday— -Christmas—morning . A stranger , habited in a red tourist suit , presenting himself with the necessary credentials , induced

the worthy and respected architect nnd esteemed citizen , Ilerr Grntzbaum , to accompany him to tho roof to inspect the works in progress . Tho accomplished Herr , in ascending one of tho uncompleted towers , tho better fo point out to his companion some of tho details of the structure , sought to support himself by tho croekolliiig work , but one of tho staples

unfortunately giving way beneath his grasp , he was precipitated many hundred feet fo the pavement below , whence he was taken np in a crushed mass , life being , of course , totally extinct . Death must have been instantaneous . The visitor hurriedly descended by tho ladders provided , and thc staircase , as far as completed , and at onco gave information to the people iu charge of the church .

It being Christmas morning , there wero no artificers engaged on the works . After having thus called attention to the tragedy , and paused on the plat / , to light the tobacco in the large china howl of an inordinately long pipo , the diluvium from which struck the passers by as

having a strong sulphurous odour , tho strange individual disappeared in the direction of the Railway Station !" As I sank back on thepillo . vs I involuntarily startled nn wife by a profane ejaculation . I exclaimed , " The U—v—I !" And I really believe it was . S . l' .

Peare, Good Will Iowards Men!

Peare , Good Will Iowards Men !

—* S ^ WUCH is the messa ge of each Christmas Day , jjfflS Such the glad truth Freemasonry would proclaim ; 5 ? S ^ y For us the hurrying years they melt away , ^ S S Her precepts still remain , thank God ! the same . Ill Iu vain the storms of earth , the " wreck of time , " Hopeless loud folly ' s curse , or persecution ' s cry ; Freomasonry ' s glad maxims , kind , sublime , Tho bigot ' s wrath , the scorncr ' s jests defy .

I ' o-day , ' mid fleeting dreams and faltering sense , 'Mid falsehood ' s brazen forehead and its shame ; When honest worth yields to inane pretence , Onr good old Craft upholds its honoured name . Unchanged by time , undaunted and erect , While empires pass and ruins strew tho ground , H yet unfurls its flag to mark and to protect

The Craft , wheree ' er on earth it may be found , Long may it flourish , may no foes assail , May it endure , survive , through good and ill , May its glad message ne ' er grow faint or fail—UNTO ALL MORTAL MKN PHAGE AND GOODWILL

How I First Berame A Mason.

How I First Berame a Mason .

ffiKSaT was a gusty , wild , wintry night ou Christmas eve , gtug some forty years ago . Nofc one of those conven-^ 5 »» tional Christmas eve ' s which we are apt " to asso-§ i ciate in our fancies with that sacred time . There 5 was no snow , or frost , or ice . Outsideallwas barren I ¦> and bl eak , and there was a cutting east wind , which , combined with a pelting rain , seemed to freeze your very marrow bones , and make you long for the comfort of a well-lighted and comfortably carpeted room , with

a blazing fire in it , and tho shutters closed . How it was in England that night I do not know , for I am writing about an episode which occurred in my life when I was in an important town iu Norway . I was a young man then , quite a youth in fact , being only about twenty-two . Up till then my life had been very happy . Roared in the charming little village of Bowuoss , whose

shores slope down to and are washed by the beautiful waters of Windermere , I had there passed the whole of my days until thatdato . Then I becamc-as many a cleverer youth than over I was has become—tired of my home , tired of my parent ' s gentle care , tired of the loving creature who had beon my companion from my boyish days , and who had consented to become my partner

through life , and ungrateful boy as I was had come off to this bleak , though , as I shall afterwards toll you , not inhospitable place , to make , as I fully expected , my fortune . It is very strange , but I havo always remarked when a boy leaves his home for the first time ho is always sanguiuo of making his fortune . Visions ever float before him of a ten years' labour and work ,

to be followed by a life of ease and rest amid the riches which ho shall have gathered to himself during his ten years of striving . Perhaps it is well that it should bo so . I believe mysolf that it ought to he so . When tho Great Architect of the Universe created man ho planted in his bosom a precious germ which lurks iu every man's bosom . No matter how despondent an

individual may ho ho will find that ho never loses this precious gift . That gift is hope , and I thank God from my heart that ho has always kept the lamp of hopo burning in my heart . But I am digressing , and some of my readers will say , " Oh , the writer of this is a garrulous old man , who wants to reatl us a long Christmas homily on ' Hope '" Not so , my friends ; I am not naturally

garrulous , so I will , with your permission , return to my narrative , and if it does not read so well as you would have liked it to read , yon must forgive an old man ' s failing powers . I will tell yon what had made mc choose this locality , which , nfc first , m .-iy npjxvir to yon strange nnd undesirable . I hail always had a desire to travel nnd see

now sights antl scones , and I had had a desire to make money . For sinco I had become engaged to my darling Ella my whole thoughts had centred on this one ideahow to attain to a state of affluence so as to maintain her in happiness . Her entreaties that I should stay at homo and live on the little plot of land which my forefathers had cultivated before me for generations , had

no weight whatever with me . A city friend , who had been staying with us in the summer , had fanned this flame of ambition within me , until I had como to look on my departure ns a sacred necessity . Ho told mo how several of his companions had gone over to Norway and wero doing well . After this nothing would satisfy me , bnt that 1 must go myself . And so 1 went . I will

not linger over the leave-takings . I am nn old man now , but the remembrance of that timo will always cling to me as long as I live . I loft tho home of my childhood in August , and I bad been hero for some three months . Things had gone badly with mo , for I had not got , employment , and as far as I could then seo was not likolv to get any for some time to come . A

very important reason kept me from returning home , ami that was lhat I had not . tho wherewithal ! to pay my passage . One thing after another had gone , and I was earnestly cogitating with myself whether it would bo justifiable to purl with a ring that I was wearing—lice ring . Header , have you ever been in that predicament ? If so you will be able to feel for me .

1 had wandered out that night down to tho quay , unable to stay in the house where tho other lodgers wore making merry over their yulctidc . 1 bad hastened out to try to forget my feelings . I was longing and praying that some gootl old Chcryble woultl como across my path and take pity on me , at least till 1 could earn enough money to take mo back to the dear

old place 1 had so ruthlessly cast from mo . Then my thoughts would take a new turn , and 1 would find myself speculating on what they wore doing at homo . I could imagine tho clean snntled floor , the yule log blazing in tho old " ingle nuke , " my parents sitting on each side , with the dear loving face in tho centre , which 1 would have given so much to have hud resting on my

shoulder once more . And 1 could imagine the immense round of beef on the table , flanked by the proverbial sweet pie and tho haver bread antl October-brewed . Then my thoughts wandered slowly back to myself , and I began to discover that I was cold antl wet , so I commenced fo retrace my steps amid coils of tarry rope antl barrels of strongly smelling fish . Away , up in the

town , I could hear the bells proclaiming the anniversary of the Saviour , and this nt any rate was real . I know that they at home would bo listening to the same sounds , and that we could all unite that winter ' s evening in thanking our God for past mercies , and praying for a happy meeting . I am a great believer in fate . I firmly believe that it was my fote to walk out that night on to thc old

How I First Berame A Mason.

quay , and to undergo the strange adventure I am about to relate , as I am of my own existence . At one spot they were loading a vessel , and as I passed , ono of the sailors threw out a rope , with whioh I came in violent contact , causing me to be knocked down . The force of tho blow stunned me for some time , and when I woke I was faint with pain . I had

been carried during my swoon into a strange building which I had often noticed afc the entrance to the pier , but to which I had never had the curiosity to ask for admission . Two or three kind , earnest , faces were bent over me when I recovered , and I was asked in gentle tones , such as a loving brother might have used , whether I felt myself much worse . Smarting with pain I tried

to rise to my feet , but the effort was too much for me , and I sank back exhausted . One of my newly-found friends applied some wine to my lips , whicli greatly revived me , and I was able to ask where I was , or what place I was in . A gentleman bending over me warned me that it would bo much better that I should maintain a perfect quiet , and advised me to endeavour to

obtain some sleep . But my excited state forbade such an idea , and after much entreaty never to divulge what I should see and hear , it was explained to me that I had been observed , when I met with my accident , by some of tho members as they were leaving their boat to attend a meeting of their lodge , aud true to the principles of universal charity inculcated by their

order they had conveyed me there , and had admimstei ed such restoratives ns they thought best . They explained to me that had there been another house near I should never have been brought there , as thoy were ahout to perforin ono of their most Solemn and impressive rites . Four brethren who were to sail on the morrow were to bo initiated , aud for this purpose the lodge bad

mot . I learnt afterwards thafc it was a "lodge of emergency" which had boon called for the occasion . One of the brethren sat by me whilst the beautiful and impressive ceremony was gone through , and in a low voice , modulated by a tender care , explained to mo tho meaning and aims of Freemasonry . When tho initiation of tho four novices was

completed , my friend , who had drawn from me my story , rose , nnd in kind and considerate language related it to his brethren , ending with a motion that as I had soon so much of tho lodge , it was but fair to themselves and mc that I should become a member , nnd moved that the venerable Master proceed with the initiation of his youthful brother , provided the brethren

in full lodgo assembled deemed it advisable . There being no dissentients , I was invited to make my approach to thc Master , which I did , and he read over to mo tho solemn nover-to-bc-forgotton words of the charge . Then liko one in a dream I was invested with t ) w Oiilcr ot Frcmnsonry , and my newly-found friends , and ns I could now call thorn brethren , came forward and

offered mo thoir hearty congratulations . Reader , my story is soon finished . I was taken homo to spend tho glad season of Christinas with tho brother who had proposed my initiation , nnd I found him over a brother to mc . I was , when I became strong again , introduced into his office , and as vacancies occurred by thoso above

me leaving or dying , I was promoted , until at Inst I bocame partner in ono of the first business houses in Copenhagen . Long sinco I married my darling , and aa I look nt my threo boys , brothers as well as sons , 1 am thankful for the stormy Christmas eve when I wandered on tho forsaken old quay , and became a Freemason . W . M . li .

Christmastide.

Christmastide .

* _> trt ^ vii , a pl ^ f ^ ERE is Christmas once again , e $ I * lijj Christmas with its smiling face , tfS ~^* Let ' s usher in tho happy reigu yflj Of Christmas kindness , Christmas grace m * With holly deck , with ivy wreathe

Each pleasant room and hall , Antl let each mystic motto breathe Welcome unto all .

Heap crackling logs upon the fire , Draw tho curtains , light tho tree , Let youth and old ago never tiro Of harmless kindly jollity .

Do not the nusletoo forget , Mysterious is its power , Let youth in sportive pastimes met

Enjoy the smiling hour . Collect true hearts ! tho calls resound , For tho well-decked board to-day ; Antl let tho kindly toast go round

" To dear friends far away . " Lot youth and ago , when now they meet , As loving hearts rejoice , In pleasant hours and converse sweet To greet affection ' s voice .

Oh ! happy scene—oh ! pleasant sight , May peace and lovo abide With age so kind , and youth so bright , In this their Christmastide . P .

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