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  • June 1, 1879
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  • CATHERINE CARMICHAEL; on, THREE YEARS RUNNING.
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    Article CATHERINE CARMICHAEL; on, THREE YEARS RUNNING. ← Page 11 of 15 →
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Catherine Carmichael; On, Three Years Running.

there had been daylight , and John Carmichael had been there . Now it was pitch dark , though it was in the middle of summer , and the waters were running very strong . The ferryman refused at first to put the buggy on the raft , bidding old Carmichael wait till the next morning . It was Christmas Eve , he said , and he did not care to be drowned on Christmas Eve . Nor was such to be his destiny . But it was the destiny of Peter Carmichael . The waters went him and of his horsesAt three

over one . o ' clock in the morning his body was brought home to Warriwa , lying across the back of the other . The ferryman had been unable to save the man's life , but had got the body , and had brought it home to tho young , widow just twelve months after the day on which she had become a wife .

CHAPTEK III . CHKISTJIAS DAY . NO . 8 . TIUSKIS she was , on the morning of that Christmas Day , with the ferryman and that old woman , with the half-idiot boy , and the body of her dead husband ! She was so stunned that she sat motionless for hours

, with the corpse close to her , lying stretched out on the verandah , with a sheet over it . It is a part of the cruelty of the life which is lived m desolate places , far away , that when death comes , the small incidents of death are not mitigated to the sufferer by the hands of strangers . If the poorest wife here at home becomes a widow , some attendant hands will close the glazed eye and cover up the limbs , and close the coffin which is there at hand ; and then it will be taken and hidden for

away ever . There is an appropriate spot , though it be but under the poorhouse wall . Here there was no appropriate spot , no ready hand , no coffin , no coroner with his authority , no parish officer ready with his directions . She sat there numb , motionless , voiceless , thinking where John Carmichael might be . Could it be that he would come back to her , and take from her that ghastly duty of getting rid of the object that was lying within a yard or two of her arm ? She tried to weep , telling herself that , as a wife now widowed , she was bound to

weep for her husband . But there was not a tear , nor a sob , nor a moan . She argued it with herself , saying that she would grieve for him now that he was dead . But she could not grieve , —not for that ; only for her own wretchedness and desolation . If the waters had gone over her instead of him , then how merciful would heaven have been to her ! The misery of her condition came home to her with its full weight , —her desolation , her powerlessness , her friendlessness , the absence of all interest in life , of all for hvmgbut she could not induce

reason ; herself to say , even to herself , that she was struck with anguish on account of him . That voice , that touch , the eunning leer of that eye , would never trouble her again . She had been freed from something . She became angry with herself because it was in this way that she regarded it but it was thus that she continued to regard it . She had threatened once to kill him —to kill him should he speak a word as to which she bade him to be silent he

. Now was dead , —whether he had spoken that word or not . Then she wondered whether he had spoken it , and she wondered , also , what John Carmichael would say or do when he should hear that his kinsman was no more . So she sat motionless for hours within her room , but with the door open on to the verandah , and the feet of the corpse within a few yards of her chair .

Tho old ferryman took the horse , and went out under the boy ' s guidance in quest of the shepherds . Distances are large on these sheep-runs , and a shepherd with his flock is not always easily found . It was nearly evening before he returned with two of these men , and then they dug the grave , —not very far away , as the body must be earned in their arms ; and then they buried him , putting up a rough palisade around the spot to guard it , if it might be so guarded for a while , from the rats . She

“The Masonic Magazine: 1879-06-01, Page 60” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 23 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01061879/page/60/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
TRANSMISSION OF MASONIC ART AND SYMBOLISM IN THE FOURTH CENTURY. Article 1
A QUEER CAREER. Article 6
THE PAST. Article 18
A PERFECTLY AWFULLY LOVELY POEM. Article 19
TO ARTHUR . Article 20
ARE YOU A MASTER MASON ? Article 21
THE LITERARY EXPERIENCES OF A YOUNG MAN WITH A FUTURE. Article 26
HERMES TRISMEGISTUS. Article 27
A CATALOGUE OF MASONIC BOOKS IN THE BRITISH MUSEUM. Article 29
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART. Article 36
GOTHIC ARCHITECTURE.* Article 42
ST. ALBAN'S CATHEDRAL. Article 46
TO HOPE. Article 48
THE DEPUTY GRAND MASTER OF ENGLAND. Article 49
CATHERINE CARMICHAEL; on, THREE YEARS RUNNING. Article 50
CHRISTMAS, 1878. Article 64
SONNET. Article 65
LIST OF "ANCIENT LODGES," 1813, WITH THEIR NUMBERS IN 1814, 1832, AND 1863. Article 66
THREE CHRISTMAS EVES. Article 73
GRADUS AD OPUS CAEMENTITIUM. Article 80
HOW I WAS FIRST PREPARED TO BE MADE A MASON. Article 83
CHRISTMAS DAY ON BOARD HER MAJESTY'S SHIP "NONSUCH." Article 92
A PHILOLOGICAL FANCY Article 95
ALONE. Article 97
DESCRIPTION OF A CHURCH SITUATED IN FORT MANOEL, MALTA, IN WHICH ARE SEVERAL INTERESTING MASONIC ILLUSTRATIONS. Article 98
THE LOVING CUP: OR, HOW THE DUSTMEN WERE DIDDLED. Article 102
A CHRISTMAS DAY BEFORE THE ENEMY. Article 105
GERMAN MASONIC TEACHING ONE HUNDRED YEARS AGO. Article 108
A MEMORY. Article 111
ROB MOORSON. Article 112
PARTED. Article 120
THE MAP OF EUROPE IN 1879. Article 121
SOME ACCOUNT OF THE LODGE OF ANTIQUITY, NO. 146, BOLTON. Article 124
AN UNKNOWN WATERING-PLACE. Article 127
SHAKSPERE, HIS FRIENDS AND ACQUAINTANCES. Article 131
SKETCHES OF CHARACTER. Article 138
SONNET. Article 139
THE VOLITATIONIST. Article 139
A SIMILE. Article 144
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Page 60

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

Catherine Carmichael; On, Three Years Running.

there had been daylight , and John Carmichael had been there . Now it was pitch dark , though it was in the middle of summer , and the waters were running very strong . The ferryman refused at first to put the buggy on the raft , bidding old Carmichael wait till the next morning . It was Christmas Eve , he said , and he did not care to be drowned on Christmas Eve . Nor was such to be his destiny . But it was the destiny of Peter Carmichael . The waters went him and of his horsesAt three

over one . o ' clock in the morning his body was brought home to Warriwa , lying across the back of the other . The ferryman had been unable to save the man's life , but had got the body , and had brought it home to tho young , widow just twelve months after the day on which she had become a wife .

CHAPTEK III . CHKISTJIAS DAY . NO . 8 . TIUSKIS she was , on the morning of that Christmas Day , with the ferryman and that old woman , with the half-idiot boy , and the body of her dead husband ! She was so stunned that she sat motionless for hours

, with the corpse close to her , lying stretched out on the verandah , with a sheet over it . It is a part of the cruelty of the life which is lived m desolate places , far away , that when death comes , the small incidents of death are not mitigated to the sufferer by the hands of strangers . If the poorest wife here at home becomes a widow , some attendant hands will close the glazed eye and cover up the limbs , and close the coffin which is there at hand ; and then it will be taken and hidden for

away ever . There is an appropriate spot , though it be but under the poorhouse wall . Here there was no appropriate spot , no ready hand , no coffin , no coroner with his authority , no parish officer ready with his directions . She sat there numb , motionless , voiceless , thinking where John Carmichael might be . Could it be that he would come back to her , and take from her that ghastly duty of getting rid of the object that was lying within a yard or two of her arm ? She tried to weep , telling herself that , as a wife now widowed , she was bound to

weep for her husband . But there was not a tear , nor a sob , nor a moan . She argued it with herself , saying that she would grieve for him now that he was dead . But she could not grieve , —not for that ; only for her own wretchedness and desolation . If the waters had gone over her instead of him , then how merciful would heaven have been to her ! The misery of her condition came home to her with its full weight , —her desolation , her powerlessness , her friendlessness , the absence of all interest in life , of all for hvmgbut she could not induce

reason ; herself to say , even to herself , that she was struck with anguish on account of him . That voice , that touch , the eunning leer of that eye , would never trouble her again . She had been freed from something . She became angry with herself because it was in this way that she regarded it but it was thus that she continued to regard it . She had threatened once to kill him —to kill him should he speak a word as to which she bade him to be silent he

. Now was dead , —whether he had spoken that word or not . Then she wondered whether he had spoken it , and she wondered , also , what John Carmichael would say or do when he should hear that his kinsman was no more . So she sat motionless for hours within her room , but with the door open on to the verandah , and the feet of the corpse within a few yards of her chair .

Tho old ferryman took the horse , and went out under the boy ' s guidance in quest of the shepherds . Distances are large on these sheep-runs , and a shepherd with his flock is not always easily found . It was nearly evening before he returned with two of these men , and then they dug the grave , —not very far away , as the body must be earned in their arms ; and then they buried him , putting up a rough palisade around the spot to guard it , if it might be so guarded for a while , from the rats . She

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