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  • The Masonic Mirror
  • Sept. 1, 1855
  • Page 19
  • FORGET-ME-NOT.
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The Masonic Mirror, Sept. 1, 1855: Page 19

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    Article BROTHERLY LOVE. ← Page 9 of 9
    Article FORGET-ME-NOT. Page 1 of 1
Page 19

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

Brotherly Love.

take of breakfast at Mrs . St . Claire ' s , and in a short time they were borne away from the scene of former associations . But every year , at a certain anniversary , the same parties visited the town , with some additional faces in the shape of rosy cherub-like children , and spent some time in the little cemetery . Nor were they the only visitors there , for it was a favourite haunt for the youths and maidens of the district who would assemble at a tomb

around which the flowers of the year , planted and attended by some friendly hand , grew in profusion . And eyes grew moistened with tears as the history of its tenant was related . It was a simple inornate tomb , surmounted by an urn , on which was inscribed , "Alfred Beaufrere , aged 23 years , " and underneath "BROTHERLY LOVE . "

Forget-Me-Not.

FORGET-ME-NOT .

( A PASTORAL . '—ORIGINAL . ) When "Winter rages , And . the wkids are pitiless and cola , Ancl past years seems as ages , To the infirm and old . When round the hearth ,

The inmates of the humble cot , Far happier than the great ones of the earth . Though lowly be their humble lot , With plaintive tale , and sportive song , — Pass the night long—Forget me not ! And when sweet Spring ,

Comes like the morning ' s break , And all of nature is awake Lo beauty , and her handmaids bring , The first-born offering of the vale , The simple daisy , aud the primrose pale , And the lark upon the wing , Soars to the sky , Wafting his song of praise to the most High-Forget me not !

And when comes Summer gay , With robes of green , And garland of fresh flowers , Sporting the live long day I' th' forest shade , or by the screen , Of honey-suckle bowers , Shedding her precious dews upon those

Children of her pride— the lilly and the rose—Forget me not 1 And when comes Autumn mild And pale , with " sear and yellow leaf , " Sighing in all the winds her grief , As o ' er the wild ,

The rude and reckless breeze , Scatters the dying foliage of the trees—Forget mo not ! ROBERT MCMURRAY ,

“The Masonic Mirror: 1855-09-01, Page 19” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 11 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mir/issues/mmg_01091855/page/19/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
THE "SUSSEX WING" OF THE ROYAL FREE HOSPITAL. Article 1
THE MARK DEGREE. Article 3
FREEMASONRY IN ENGLAND. Article 4
BROTHERLY LOVE. Article 11
FORGET-ME-NOT. Article 19
MASONIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 20
LONDON LODGES Article 25
PROVINCIAL LODGES. Article 26
ROYAL ARCH. Article 46
THE HIGH DEGREES. Article 47
THE COLONIES. Article 48
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 49
SUMMARY OF NEWS FOR AUGUST. Article 51
Untitled Article 59
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 60
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Page 19

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

Brotherly Love.

take of breakfast at Mrs . St . Claire ' s , and in a short time they were borne away from the scene of former associations . But every year , at a certain anniversary , the same parties visited the town , with some additional faces in the shape of rosy cherub-like children , and spent some time in the little cemetery . Nor were they the only visitors there , for it was a favourite haunt for the youths and maidens of the district who would assemble at a tomb

around which the flowers of the year , planted and attended by some friendly hand , grew in profusion . And eyes grew moistened with tears as the history of its tenant was related . It was a simple inornate tomb , surmounted by an urn , on which was inscribed , "Alfred Beaufrere , aged 23 years , " and underneath "BROTHERLY LOVE . "

Forget-Me-Not.

FORGET-ME-NOT .

( A PASTORAL . '—ORIGINAL . ) When "Winter rages , And . the wkids are pitiless and cola , Ancl past years seems as ages , To the infirm and old . When round the hearth ,

The inmates of the humble cot , Far happier than the great ones of the earth . Though lowly be their humble lot , With plaintive tale , and sportive song , — Pass the night long—Forget me not ! And when sweet Spring ,

Comes like the morning ' s break , And all of nature is awake Lo beauty , and her handmaids bring , The first-born offering of the vale , The simple daisy , aud the primrose pale , And the lark upon the wing , Soars to the sky , Wafting his song of praise to the most High-Forget me not !

And when comes Summer gay , With robes of green , And garland of fresh flowers , Sporting the live long day I' th' forest shade , or by the screen , Of honey-suckle bowers , Shedding her precious dews upon those

Children of her pride— the lilly and the rose—Forget me not 1 And when comes Autumn mild And pale , with " sear and yellow leaf , " Sighing in all the winds her grief , As o ' er the wild ,

The rude and reckless breeze , Scatters the dying foliage of the trees—Forget mo not ! ROBERT MCMURRAY ,

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