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  • Dec. 1, 1903
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The Masonic Illustrated, Dec. 1, 1903: Page 29

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A Shakespearian Heroine.

mothers . I he exceptions are [ tiliet , whose mothet s commands result in the tragedy , and Perdita , whose mother ... " I left the two to make it up . So now I understood the mystery ; I had seen the contents of Mrs . Browne ' s cupboard ; the cause of the lassitude

and the discontent . Portia ' s education and treatment was the bone of contention between these two otherwise happy people . A continual con Met between the Elizabethan and the Victorian ideals .

I wondered what view Miss Portia herself took of the question . I was inclined to doubt whether she took any . She appeared to be just a good-humoured , ordinary girl , with no taste for views of any kind . She was devoted to golf and out-door exercise . She seemed equally fond of both her parents , treating their obvious idiosyncracies with indulgent

good nature . It must have been owing to her tact , I thought , that their strained relations had never been prominently brought before the notice of their neighbours . " Her tact ! What a small characteristic to be the leading one of a Shakespearian Heroine ! " I smiled to

myself . " What do you do when domestic affairs go wrong ? " I once asked of Portia when I knew her better . "Do ? " said Miss Browne , opening wide , unconsidering eyes . " I just avoid doing anything . Things always right

themselves ; the great thing is not to fuss . " Mr . Browne having a very fair fortune , and Portia being an only child , it was not to be expected that no candidate should appear for her hand . It was common knowledge , indeed , that she had two suitors . One was a great

Shakeperian scholar , a man of dignity , refinement , and fortune , her father ' s friend ; and the other was Lady Pechell ' s son , Sir Joseph ; a fat and lazy young man , whose strongest emotions were centered on his meals .

Portia showed no unfair inclination to favour one more than the other . It was impossible to tell which she preferred . But her parents were less impartial . Marlley Browne openly declared his partisanship for his friend , Mr . Fayrer ; Mrs . Browne made no attempt to disguise her preference for Sir Joseph Pechell .

As Mr . Browne declared , with much emphasis , it was very objectionable for a mother to try and coerce her daughter in the question of matrimony . It was a thing which a girl should have perfect freedom to decide , guided , of course , by a father ' s experience of the world .

Now in this case it was patent that Sir Joseph ' s courtship was a very lukewarm affair , obviously engineered by his mother , who had her eye on Portia ' s expectations . The young man himself had no particular qualifications whatever , beyond his title , and this , in Mr . Browne's opinion , was even a hindrance .

" There were no baronets in Shakespeare ' s time , " he said , as if this were really a valid objection . But a more genuine drawback became apparent when he added : " I couldn't get on without my little girl . I hope Portia will never leave us . I should like her husband to be one of the family , and how

could I endure a loafer like Sir Joseph in my house ? Now Fayrer has every quality of mind and character that I can ask . True , he is somewhat older than she is . But what does Shakespeare say ? 'Let still the woman take an elder than herself ; so wears she to him , so sways she level in her

husband's heart . ' I know he will make my little Portia happy , I will never consent to having her future sold and his happiness sacrificed for the sake of an empty title . "

Mrs . Browne held a different opinion . " Mr . Fayrer is nearly forty ; Portia is twenty ; and he is old for his years , " she said to me one day in a fit of confidential outpouring . " No doubt he has more money than Sir Joseph , but what position can he give Portia compared with a baronetcy ? Her happiness is the first thing to be

considered . It is nonsense to call a title empty . It gives a great many things that we all want to have . Consideration from all sorts of people . If you have ever travelled , for instance , with anyone with a title , you will know what I mean . How station-masters insist on giving you entire

railway carriages ! How hotel-keepers consider vour lightest complaints ! How the other travellers try to be agreeable Does not Lad ) - Pechell enjoy the predominance she has among us , which , if she had no title , she certainly would never have obtained ? There is nothing ' empty ' in getting

by a stroke of a wand , so to speak , what other people pay hard cash , and struggle for years to obtain . Besides , Sir Joseph is a good son , and will make a good husband . "

Both parents , it seemed to me , showed a natural regard for their daughter ' s happiness , not unmixed with a proper solicitude for their personal advantage . But Portia only said to the one : " I cannot grieve my Father by marrying against his will ; " and to the other : " I cannot grieve my Mother by marrying against her will . " And she calmly went on playing golf with young Jones , and young Huggins and the other young people .

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Patron —HIS MAJESTY THE KING . Patroness—HER MAJESTY QUEEN ALEXANDRA . Instituted in 1827 for the Maintenance and Kdueation of Orphans of all denominations , from all parts of the British Empire whose parents were once in prosperous circumstances . Boys and Girls are admitted by election , presentation , and in some cases l > v purchase between the ages of 7 and 12 , and are retained until 15 . A good general education and sound religious training are given in both Schools . Tho Committee earnestly appeal for increased support to enable them to carry on the good work now being effected by this old established National Charity , which is dependent on Voluntary aid . Subscriptions and Donations most thankfully received . Annua ] Subscription : —For One Vote . ids . 6 d . ; for Two Votes , /' l is Life Subscription : — For One Vote , , £ 5 5 * . ; for Two Votes , _ £ " io io . s . Life Presentation , £ 350 . Bankers : —Messrs . WILLIAMS , DEACON'S BANK , LTD ., 20 , Birchin Lane , E . C .

Offices—27 , Clement ' s Lane , E . C

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“The Masonic Illustrated: 1903-12-01, Page 29” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 17 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mil/issues/mil_01121903/page/29/.
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Untitled Article 1
The Province of Oxfordshire. Article 2
Truro Cathedral. Article 5
Two Imperial Craftsmen. Article 7
Untitled Article 8
Untitled Article 9
Presentation to Bro. Frederick C. Van Duzer. Article 10
Untitled Ad 10
Untitled Ad 10
Consecration of the Ulster Lodge, No. 2972. Article 11
Consecration of the Connaught Lodge, No. 2981. Article 12
"Corinthian'' Hall, Kobe. Article 13
King Edward VII. Preceptory, No. 173. Article 15
Masonic Presentation at South Shields. Article 15
Untitled Ad 15
Untitled Ad 16
Untitled Ad 16
Untitled Ad 16
Untitled Ad 16
Freemasonry in 1903. Article 16
At the Sign of the Perfect Ashlar. Article 17
Quarterly Communication of Grand Lodge. Article 20
Untitled Ad 20
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Whittington Lodge, No. 862. Article 21
Bro. John Jaylor, J.P. Article 21
Twelfth Annual Festival of the Kirby Lodge of Instruction , No. 263. Article 22
Untitled Ad 22
Untitled Ad 22
Commercial Travellers' Lod ge, No . 2795. Article 23
Untitled Ad 23
Untitled Ad 23
Founders of the Borough of Bethnal Green Lodge, No. 2896. Article 24
"Where Masons do Congregate." Article 25
A Shakespearian heroine. Article 26
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

A Shakespearian Heroine.

mothers . I he exceptions are [ tiliet , whose mothet s commands result in the tragedy , and Perdita , whose mother ... " I left the two to make it up . So now I understood the mystery ; I had seen the contents of Mrs . Browne ' s cupboard ; the cause of the lassitude

and the discontent . Portia ' s education and treatment was the bone of contention between these two otherwise happy people . A continual con Met between the Elizabethan and the Victorian ideals .

I wondered what view Miss Portia herself took of the question . I was inclined to doubt whether she took any . She appeared to be just a good-humoured , ordinary girl , with no taste for views of any kind . She was devoted to golf and out-door exercise . She seemed equally fond of both her parents , treating their obvious idiosyncracies with indulgent

good nature . It must have been owing to her tact , I thought , that their strained relations had never been prominently brought before the notice of their neighbours . " Her tact ! What a small characteristic to be the leading one of a Shakespearian Heroine ! " I smiled to

myself . " What do you do when domestic affairs go wrong ? " I once asked of Portia when I knew her better . "Do ? " said Miss Browne , opening wide , unconsidering eyes . " I just avoid doing anything . Things always right

themselves ; the great thing is not to fuss . " Mr . Browne having a very fair fortune , and Portia being an only child , it was not to be expected that no candidate should appear for her hand . It was common knowledge , indeed , that she had two suitors . One was a great

Shakeperian scholar , a man of dignity , refinement , and fortune , her father ' s friend ; and the other was Lady Pechell ' s son , Sir Joseph ; a fat and lazy young man , whose strongest emotions were centered on his meals .

Portia showed no unfair inclination to favour one more than the other . It was impossible to tell which she preferred . But her parents were less impartial . Marlley Browne openly declared his partisanship for his friend , Mr . Fayrer ; Mrs . Browne made no attempt to disguise her preference for Sir Joseph Pechell .

As Mr . Browne declared , with much emphasis , it was very objectionable for a mother to try and coerce her daughter in the question of matrimony . It was a thing which a girl should have perfect freedom to decide , guided , of course , by a father ' s experience of the world .

Now in this case it was patent that Sir Joseph ' s courtship was a very lukewarm affair , obviously engineered by his mother , who had her eye on Portia ' s expectations . The young man himself had no particular qualifications whatever , beyond his title , and this , in Mr . Browne's opinion , was even a hindrance .

" There were no baronets in Shakespeare ' s time , " he said , as if this were really a valid objection . But a more genuine drawback became apparent when he added : " I couldn't get on without my little girl . I hope Portia will never leave us . I should like her husband to be one of the family , and how

could I endure a loafer like Sir Joseph in my house ? Now Fayrer has every quality of mind and character that I can ask . True , he is somewhat older than she is . But what does Shakespeare say ? 'Let still the woman take an elder than herself ; so wears she to him , so sways she level in her

husband's heart . ' I know he will make my little Portia happy , I will never consent to having her future sold and his happiness sacrificed for the sake of an empty title . "

Mrs . Browne held a different opinion . " Mr . Fayrer is nearly forty ; Portia is twenty ; and he is old for his years , " she said to me one day in a fit of confidential outpouring . " No doubt he has more money than Sir Joseph , but what position can he give Portia compared with a baronetcy ? Her happiness is the first thing to be

considered . It is nonsense to call a title empty . It gives a great many things that we all want to have . Consideration from all sorts of people . If you have ever travelled , for instance , with anyone with a title , you will know what I mean . How station-masters insist on giving you entire

railway carriages ! How hotel-keepers consider vour lightest complaints ! How the other travellers try to be agreeable Does not Lad ) - Pechell enjoy the predominance she has among us , which , if she had no title , she certainly would never have obtained ? There is nothing ' empty ' in getting

by a stroke of a wand , so to speak , what other people pay hard cash , and struggle for years to obtain . Besides , Sir Joseph is a good son , and will make a good husband . "

Both parents , it seemed to me , showed a natural regard for their daughter ' s happiness , not unmixed with a proper solicitude for their personal advantage . But Portia only said to the one : " I cannot grieve my Father by marrying against his will ; " and to the other : " I cannot grieve my Mother by marrying against her will . " And she calmly went on playing golf with young Jones , and young Huggins and the other young people .

Ad02901

BRITISH ORPHAN

ASYLUM» , I _ » V cwn

Patron —HIS MAJESTY THE KING . Patroness—HER MAJESTY QUEEN ALEXANDRA . Instituted in 1827 for the Maintenance and Kdueation of Orphans of all denominations , from all parts of the British Empire whose parents were once in prosperous circumstances . Boys and Girls are admitted by election , presentation , and in some cases l > v purchase between the ages of 7 and 12 , and are retained until 15 . A good general education and sound religious training are given in both Schools . Tho Committee earnestly appeal for increased support to enable them to carry on the good work now being effected by this old established National Charity , which is dependent on Voluntary aid . Subscriptions and Donations most thankfully received . Annua ] Subscription : —For One Vote . ids . 6 d . ; for Two Votes , /' l is Life Subscription : — For One Vote , , £ 5 5 * . ; for Two Votes , _ £ " io io . s . Life Presentation , £ 350 . Bankers : —Messrs . WILLIAMS , DEACON'S BANK , LTD ., 20 , Birchin Lane , E . C .

Offices—27 , Clement ' s Lane , E . C

CHAHLES T . HOSKITJS , Secretary

1 ( . , - . . . «|^ HBHHMH ^^^ MMI ^ HMHH ^ HM ___________________________________________________________________________

Ad02902

Artistic Souvenirs FOR INSTALLATION

BANQUETSWe make a Speciality of Boxes and Cabinets of Artistic and Original Designs , effective and inexpensive , hold Cigars , Cigarettes and Matches , embossed in Gold , Silver and Colors . Specimens of different kinds can be seen at

HAVAN , ?? NtwHILt « ORXERS

5 . COHEN & CO . ( Sole Agents

)V 7 .-. 1 W . —1389 HOLBORN . yV 7 « . ™ „„ .-C _ lGAROTYPE . ^ ^

. , A RII ' 7 '^^^^^^^^ ||||||||||||||||||||||| ____________________ . _______________________________________

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