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  • Aug. 1, 1881
  • Page 33
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The Masonic Magazine, Aug. 1, 1881: Page 33

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    Article A MASON'S STORY. ← Page 3 of 3
Page 33

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

A Mason's Story.

With this the subject dropped . While her lover was thus striving after a knowledge of the unattainable , Mary was living the same quiet life in her English home . The summer , with its many and varied glories , was drawing to a close , and already the hay-making season had endedand those round about her were resting for a . short time

, before commencing the harvest . The wheat was already ripening , and in the dales and on the sunny hillsides nature glowed with a golden beauty , while the grain rocked and swayed in the breeze , its music bringing back old songs long since forgotten , but with old memories re-awakened . Soon winter would be on them again , and the winter would not find her idle , but it would not find her so happy as before .

Pelham had recovered from his well-merited snubbing at the picnic , and was prosecuting his suit with renewed ardour . His efforts at success w ere now seconded by her father , whose views in regard to Falconer had blotted out all feeling of honour and ri ght . If his conscience ever pricked liim concerning the dishonourable j > art he was playing in the little drama , he would adopt the Jesuitical motto that the end fully justified the means . Besides thathe reasoned

, , " Falconer is away ; and though he probably may and will come back , he will not prove so pliant a son-in-law as Pelham . " That Falconer certainly -would not , for where any 2 ioint of honour or right was concerned he would prove as obstinate as Mr . Morton himself . One day her father said to Mary : " Mary , I wish you would listen to what Pelham has got to tell you , I think he is a God-fearing young man who would

be calculated to make your life happy . " Mary had replied : " Look here , father , the less you say about him to me the better , for I heartily despise the fellow . " With that it had ended , save for such little hints and inuendos as he had ventured to throw out , all of which were altogether lost on his fair listener . Mary was as constant as Falconer , and she could wait , although the waitingwas weary , until he could come back to claim her as his own , when all this would be forgotten as some disagreeable dream .

On the same night as the events narrated took place , Falconer awoke from a troubled sleep , with a disagreeable impression that he was not alone . There was no one in sight , however , and he arose and approached the window to look out . The stars were shining fiercely in the Indian sky , and the moon was shining with a powerful radiance . While gazing on them , and wrapt in profound contemplation , a hand was placed quietly on his arm , and the voice of his old friend in the morning bade him look on the scene before him and say was there no God ?

" Oh , man , said he , " thou hast need of God , and He is self-sufficient and to be praised . Be not thou afraid , neither be dismayed , for for ever will He be with thee , both here in this world and also in the next , wheresoever thou shalt go . " Ere Penrhyn could look round he had vanished ; but it was as though a ray of li ght had suddenly burst upon him and he had been left alone once more in his darkness . He again sought his couch , but sleep w as out of the

question , and the words kept ever recurring to his mind : " God ever present . " Verily God was revealing Himself to Falconer . ( To be continued . )

“The Masonic Magazine: 1881-08-01, Page 33” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 16 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01081881/page/33/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
THE YORK MS. No. 5, A.D. 1670. Article 1
THE ADVANTAGE OF CONFESSION. Article 5
Untitled Article 7
THE ILLUSTRATION Article 8
THE WORK OF A MASONIC SESSION. Article 8
BARNARD'S INN, HOLBORN. Article 10
MASONRY V. AGNOSTICISM* Article 13
THE MAIDEN'S BOWER: A SERENADE. Article 16
OFF FOR A HOLIDAY. Article 17
HISTORY OF THE AIREDALE LODGE, No. 387, Article 19
DESCRIPTIVE GEOMETRY AND OUR ANCIENT SECRETS. Article 22
THE GUILDHALL AND THE CHARTERS OF THE CORPORATION. Article 24
MASONIC SYMBOLISM* Article 26
FORTY YEARS AGO. Article 30
A MASON'S STORY. Article 31
THE EGYPTIAN BOOK OF THE DEAD. Article 34
AFTER ALL. Article 36
IN A HUNDRED YEARS. Article 42
LITERARY GOSSIP. Article 43
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

A Mason's Story.

With this the subject dropped . While her lover was thus striving after a knowledge of the unattainable , Mary was living the same quiet life in her English home . The summer , with its many and varied glories , was drawing to a close , and already the hay-making season had endedand those round about her were resting for a . short time

, before commencing the harvest . The wheat was already ripening , and in the dales and on the sunny hillsides nature glowed with a golden beauty , while the grain rocked and swayed in the breeze , its music bringing back old songs long since forgotten , but with old memories re-awakened . Soon winter would be on them again , and the winter would not find her idle , but it would not find her so happy as before .

Pelham had recovered from his well-merited snubbing at the picnic , and was prosecuting his suit with renewed ardour . His efforts at success w ere now seconded by her father , whose views in regard to Falconer had blotted out all feeling of honour and ri ght . If his conscience ever pricked liim concerning the dishonourable j > art he was playing in the little drama , he would adopt the Jesuitical motto that the end fully justified the means . Besides thathe reasoned

, , " Falconer is away ; and though he probably may and will come back , he will not prove so pliant a son-in-law as Pelham . " That Falconer certainly -would not , for where any 2 ioint of honour or right was concerned he would prove as obstinate as Mr . Morton himself . One day her father said to Mary : " Mary , I wish you would listen to what Pelham has got to tell you , I think he is a God-fearing young man who would

be calculated to make your life happy . " Mary had replied : " Look here , father , the less you say about him to me the better , for I heartily despise the fellow . " With that it had ended , save for such little hints and inuendos as he had ventured to throw out , all of which were altogether lost on his fair listener . Mary was as constant as Falconer , and she could wait , although the waitingwas weary , until he could come back to claim her as his own , when all this would be forgotten as some disagreeable dream .

On the same night as the events narrated took place , Falconer awoke from a troubled sleep , with a disagreeable impression that he was not alone . There was no one in sight , however , and he arose and approached the window to look out . The stars were shining fiercely in the Indian sky , and the moon was shining with a powerful radiance . While gazing on them , and wrapt in profound contemplation , a hand was placed quietly on his arm , and the voice of his old friend in the morning bade him look on the scene before him and say was there no God ?

" Oh , man , said he , " thou hast need of God , and He is self-sufficient and to be praised . Be not thou afraid , neither be dismayed , for for ever will He be with thee , both here in this world and also in the next , wheresoever thou shalt go . " Ere Penrhyn could look round he had vanished ; but it was as though a ray of li ght had suddenly burst upon him and he had been left alone once more in his darkness . He again sought his couch , but sleep w as out of the

question , and the words kept ever recurring to his mind : " God ever present . " Verily God was revealing Himself to Falconer . ( To be continued . )

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