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  • The Masonic Magazine
  • Nov. 1, 1878
  • Page 19
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The Masonic Magazine, Nov. 1, 1878: Page 19

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    Article MILDRED: AN AUTUMN ROMANCE. ← Page 4 of 4
    Article NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART. Page 1 of 4 →
Page 19

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

Mildred: An Autumn Romance.

out AA'hat it all meant till a fortnight after , when he Avas sent for by Mr . Jarvis , who told him that from a communication he had that morning received from his daughter , Avho Avas very poorly , ancl Avho had kept to her room for the last tea days and more , he jnust tell him that he had a very serious charge to bring against him , a charge Avhich Avas in part corroborated by the statement of Emma , the housemaid . In vain he expostulated and avowed his innocence . Mr . Jarvis was obdurate . He ,

Mr . Mathew , had injured his daughter ' s character—it was already the gossip of the household—ancl he must make the only reparation he could or abide the consequences . He gave him a fortnight to consider . When Marmaduke Avent CIOAVU to St . Benet ' s , the why lawyer , who had heard some rumours about his trying to exchange ( the young officer hoping , in fact , to escape by this means ) thought to checkmate him by going to the Colonel of his regiment and telling

him the story , AA'ith such additions as our readers may imagine , but Avhich it is needless to give . So Marmaduke Avas summoned back to Colchester to meet his fate , ( To be continued . )

Notes On Literature, Science, And Art.

NOTES ON LITERATURE , SCIENCE , AND ART .

BY BRO . GEORGE MARKHAM TWEDDELL . Author of " Shakspere , his Times and Contemporaries , " " The Bards -and Authors of Cleveland and South Durham" " The People ' s History of Cleveland and its Vicinage" " The Visitor ' s Handbook to Medea , )' , Coatham , and Saltburn b y the <§

fXF the Grand Lodge of the Indian Territory , founded October Sth , 1874—whose _ jurisdiction is bounded on the north by the State of Kansas , on the east bv Missouri and Arkansas , on the south by Texas , and on the west by Texas and Mexicothe August number of the Canadian Craftsman remarks : " Masonry in the far west has many difficulties to encounter—a wildhalf-civilized communitya land infested

, , with outlaAvs and ruffians , a section Avith settlements hundreds of miles apart . We think , under these circumstances , our brethren in the wfids of the Indian Territory should extort from us the Avarinest sympathy and friendship . The Lodges there haA'e united for the express purpose of advancing the best interests of the Craft . We Avish them peace , prosperity , and plenty , ancl trust that ere the Masonic year has passed , the Grand Lod ge of the Indian Territory will be recognized not onlby the Grand Lod of

y ge Manitoba , but by every Grand Lodge within the Dominion of Canada . " But the Grand Lod ge of the Indian Territory , I belieA'e , refuses to acknoAA'ledge the members of the JNegro Lod ges as genuine Masons . Let them take care that their own is always the genuine article ; for Lodges may be legally chartered , ancl eA'en their working of the ceremonies be perfect—instead of the miserable bungling Avhicb one is sometimes pained ° see but they must aim hiher than thisancl take that with them

p ; g , care Freemasonry is neither an aristoeratical plaything on the one hand , nor a plebeian drinkiiig-club on the other ; but they must prove by the purity ancl gentleness of their lives , that the Craft has a tendency to make men Aviser , kinder , and in every Avay nobler than it found them .

“The Masonic Magazine: 1878-11-01, Page 19” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 8 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01111878/page/19/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
Monthly Masonic Summary. Article 1
THE LOCKE MS. Article 2
THE ORIGIN AND REFERENCES OF THE HERMESIAN SPURIOUS FREEMASONRY. Article 3
THE PLATT MEMORIAL.—OLDHAM. Article 6
AUTUMN. Article 8
BEATRICE. Article 9
DO THY DUTY BRAVELY. Article 11
AN ELEGY. Article 12
ART-JOTTINGS IN ART-STUDIOS. Article 13
MILDRED: AN AUTUMN ROMANCE. Article 16
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART. Article 19
FAITHFULLY. Article 22
SOMETHING FOUND. Article 23
THE BROOK-SIDE. Article 24
LOST AND SAVED ; OR, NELLIE POWERS, THE MISSIONARY'S DAUGHTER. Article 25
FROM OXFORD TO LONDON BY WATER* Article 30
THE BETTER PART. Article 34
THE BENI MZAB. Article 35
LEGENDS OF THE PAST. Article 36
ASSYRIAN DISCOVERIES. Article 38
AN HERMETIC WORK. Article 42
THE WORDS OF STRENGTH. Article 48
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Mildred: An Autumn Romance.

out AA'hat it all meant till a fortnight after , when he Avas sent for by Mr . Jarvis , who told him that from a communication he had that morning received from his daughter , Avho Avas very poorly , ancl Avho had kept to her room for the last tea days and more , he jnust tell him that he had a very serious charge to bring against him , a charge Avhich Avas in part corroborated by the statement of Emma , the housemaid . In vain he expostulated and avowed his innocence . Mr . Jarvis was obdurate . He ,

Mr . Mathew , had injured his daughter ' s character—it was already the gossip of the household—ancl he must make the only reparation he could or abide the consequences . He gave him a fortnight to consider . When Marmaduke Avent CIOAVU to St . Benet ' s , the why lawyer , who had heard some rumours about his trying to exchange ( the young officer hoping , in fact , to escape by this means ) thought to checkmate him by going to the Colonel of his regiment and telling

him the story , AA'ith such additions as our readers may imagine , but Avhich it is needless to give . So Marmaduke Avas summoned back to Colchester to meet his fate , ( To be continued . )

Notes On Literature, Science, And Art.

NOTES ON LITERATURE , SCIENCE , AND ART .

BY BRO . GEORGE MARKHAM TWEDDELL . Author of " Shakspere , his Times and Contemporaries , " " The Bards -and Authors of Cleveland and South Durham" " The People ' s History of Cleveland and its Vicinage" " The Visitor ' s Handbook to Medea , )' , Coatham , and Saltburn b y the <§

fXF the Grand Lodge of the Indian Territory , founded October Sth , 1874—whose _ jurisdiction is bounded on the north by the State of Kansas , on the east bv Missouri and Arkansas , on the south by Texas , and on the west by Texas and Mexicothe August number of the Canadian Craftsman remarks : " Masonry in the far west has many difficulties to encounter—a wildhalf-civilized communitya land infested

, , with outlaAvs and ruffians , a section Avith settlements hundreds of miles apart . We think , under these circumstances , our brethren in the wfids of the Indian Territory should extort from us the Avarinest sympathy and friendship . The Lodges there haA'e united for the express purpose of advancing the best interests of the Craft . We Avish them peace , prosperity , and plenty , ancl trust that ere the Masonic year has passed , the Grand Lod ge of the Indian Territory will be recognized not onlby the Grand Lod of

y ge Manitoba , but by every Grand Lodge within the Dominion of Canada . " But the Grand Lod ge of the Indian Territory , I belieA'e , refuses to acknoAA'ledge the members of the JNegro Lod ges as genuine Masons . Let them take care that their own is always the genuine article ; for Lodges may be legally chartered , ancl eA'en their working of the ceremonies be perfect—instead of the miserable bungling Avhicb one is sometimes pained ° see but they must aim hiher than thisancl take that with them

p ; g , care Freemasonry is neither an aristoeratical plaything on the one hand , nor a plebeian drinkiiig-club on the other ; but they must prove by the purity ancl gentleness of their lives , that the Craft has a tendency to make men Aviser , kinder , and in every Avay nobler than it found them .

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