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  • Dec. 1, 1876
  • Page 23
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The Masonic Magazine, Dec. 1, 1876: Page 23

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    Article AN OLD, OLD STORY. ← Page 2 of 3 →
Page 23

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

An Old, Old Story.

perceive anything in Mr . Walters' voice , and advanced , bat in hand , as usual quite at his ease , to pay his respects to the two ladies . Miss Margerison greeted him warmly , Lucy was as her wont most kind , but

clearly a little constrained in her reception of the smiling and somewhat free aud easy young man . There was , to say the truth , reason to believe that she was a little bored by his arrival , as she was expecting her godfather aud Mr .

Mainwaring to luncheon , and they had all agreed to drive over , and dine quietly at Richmond , and return in the cool of the evening . What was to be clone 1 What was to become of this inevitable curate 1 Such reflections , however , did not affect Miss

Margerison , who for some reason or other , appeared pleased with the advent of this at any rate conversational youth ! Much to Lucy ' s distress , ere a few minutes had elapsed , she heard her aunt asking Mr . Williams to luncheonaud even

, telling him of the expedition to Richmond . And then , as she had to leave the room to give her orders , " on hospitable thoughts intent , " poor Lucy found herself condemned

to a tete-a-t ^ te with the curate . I have said before that Mr . Williams always flattered himself that he knew how to improve the occasion ; and so with this unexpected good luck , no sooner did he see that the coast was clear , than lie

endeavoured—I do not say that he was to blame—to profit by his opportunity . But Lucy was , like young ladies often , not very easy to get on with , especially if it was not the " right man !" How often have 1 laughed in life , amid

pleasant parties and festive scenes , alas , all things of the past ! " tiempi pussati " of one ' s sojourning never to return , at the huge adroitness with which the female " athlete " as it were gets rid of the wrong manor gives the cold shoulder to the bore

, , and " tackles , ' ' as old Jorum puts it , " an unsuspecting fellow , " the real hero , however , of her own little life drama . The difference between the ri ght man and the wrong man in a woman ' s eyes is very great , and always most important .

Now , as my readers will have guessed , unless they are very dense , that for poor Lucy the right man was Mr . Maiuwariug , the wrong man Mr . Williams , and so she

accordingly , like a wide-awake British maiden as she was , set herself calml y to work to meet the blushing Mr . Williams on his own ground , and if possible to give him his " coup-de-graco " before that Miss Margerison could come upon the scene . And so when our friend the

interesting aud energetic curate began in dulcet tones to speak confidingly and pleasantly to that goddess in blue and white , who sat before him in all her grace of '' golden youth , " he soon felt as all men feelas if by intuitionthat for some

, , reason or other his words fell flat on , and his special confidences were not reciprocated by the sympathies or attention of his graceful companion . Her eyes would not meet , bis .

Lucy clearl y cared nothing for his views and wants , his ideas or opinions , his words or his ways , and as she was a resolute young woman , and clear aud decided in her enunciation of what she thought and what she wished , and what she disliked

, poor Mr . Williams with a sigh gave up the struggle , and resigned nimself gracefully to the consolation of a coining luncheon , and the conversation of that " superior woman " Miss Margerison , when she kindly reappeared !

Sensible man ! And must we not say that Lucy behaved very well ? There is in her , we note , no weakness , as a friend of mine says , of " hand or mouth ; " she is not a flirt—she does not think it right to profess an interest she does not feel , or to avow a liking which is too surely unreal ! What an example to some fair young friends of mine !

They seem to look upon mau , as the law-books say , "ferai nature , " fair game , for that most dangerous of pastimes , the little innocent ; , harmless , tender flirtation ! They forget often , in these gay flirtations of theirsthat what is sport to them is often a

, deadly wound to the trusting and truehearted , and that what seems to them a legitimate amusement for the space of half-au-hour , may become the saddening " reverie " of a whole life !

Minnie Oompton met Harry Hig heover at a pleasant dance . Minnie was a blonde with bewitching blue eyes , golden hair , good hands , good teeth , good feet , and all that sort of thing . Harry Hi gheover was a reckless youth , who thought more of horses

“The Masonic Magazine: 1876-12-01, Page 23” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 11 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01121876/page/23/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
Monthly Masonic Sumnary. Article 2
SOME FURTHER REMARKS ON THE EXTRACTS FROM THE SHEFFIELD CHAPTER OF PARADISE MINUTE BOOKS.* Article 3
FATHER FOY ON SECRET SOCIETIES. Article 5
PRINCE BOLTIKOFF: Article 12
A VOICE IN NATURE. Article 16
"THE ALBURY MS."AN ANALYSIS. Article 18
AN OLD, OLD STORY. Article 22
TWO SIDES. Article 24
SOCIAL PROBLEMS AND THEIR PEACEFUL SOLUTION. Article 26
THE WOMEN OF OUR TIME. Article 30
GERARD MONTAGU; Article 32
THE ENCHANTED ISLE OF THE SEA. Article 35
CONTEMPORARY LETTERS ON THE FRENCH REVOLUTION. Article 37
LOVE YOUR NEIGHBOUR. Article 39
RETURN OF THE ARCTIC EXPEDITION. Article 40
A MEMORY. Article 41
DURHAM CATHEDRAL. Article 42
TRIFLES. Article 45
OLD GREGORY'S GHOST: Article 45
FURNESS ABBEY. Article 49
THE DAYS TO COME. Article 50
GRUMBLE NOT, BROTHER. Article 51
THE ORIGIN AND REFERENCES OF THE HERMESIAN SPURIOUS FREEMASONRY. Article 51
A Review. Article 54
FREEMASONRY! Article 59
POETS' CORNER. Article 59
PARIS RESTAURANTS. Article 63
MASONIC CENTENNIAL SONG. Article 65
THE MASONIC PHILOSOPHY. Article 65
FREEMASONRY IN FRANCE. Article 67
LOST. Article 70
AN ESSAY ON EPITAPHS. Article 71
A PARABLE. Article 74
ADDRESS OF P.G.M. BRO. HON. RICHARD VAUX, AT CENTENNIAL OF AMERICAN UNION LODGE. Article 75
SHORT IS THE WAY. Article 76
ADDRESS OF THE GRAND MASTER, J. H. GRAHAM, L.L.D., &c. Article 77
A PAGE FROM LIFE'S BOOK. Article 81
Correspondence. Article 82
REUNION. Article 85
ADDRESS OF THE V. H. AND E. SIR KT. COL. W. J. B. MACLEOD MOORE, OF THE GRAND CROSS OF THE TEMPLE, GRAND PRIOR OF THE DOMINION OF CANADA, Article 86
MASONRY EVERYWHERE. Article 93
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE AND ART. Article 93
ARE THE CHILDREN AT HOME. Article 97
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Page 23

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

An Old, Old Story.

perceive anything in Mr . Walters' voice , and advanced , bat in hand , as usual quite at his ease , to pay his respects to the two ladies . Miss Margerison greeted him warmly , Lucy was as her wont most kind , but

clearly a little constrained in her reception of the smiling and somewhat free aud easy young man . There was , to say the truth , reason to believe that she was a little bored by his arrival , as she was expecting her godfather aud Mr .

Mainwaring to luncheon , and they had all agreed to drive over , and dine quietly at Richmond , and return in the cool of the evening . What was to be clone 1 What was to become of this inevitable curate 1 Such reflections , however , did not affect Miss

Margerison , who for some reason or other , appeared pleased with the advent of this at any rate conversational youth ! Much to Lucy ' s distress , ere a few minutes had elapsed , she heard her aunt asking Mr . Williams to luncheonaud even

, telling him of the expedition to Richmond . And then , as she had to leave the room to give her orders , " on hospitable thoughts intent , " poor Lucy found herself condemned

to a tete-a-t ^ te with the curate . I have said before that Mr . Williams always flattered himself that he knew how to improve the occasion ; and so with this unexpected good luck , no sooner did he see that the coast was clear , than lie

endeavoured—I do not say that he was to blame—to profit by his opportunity . But Lucy was , like young ladies often , not very easy to get on with , especially if it was not the " right man !" How often have 1 laughed in life , amid

pleasant parties and festive scenes , alas , all things of the past ! " tiempi pussati " of one ' s sojourning never to return , at the huge adroitness with which the female " athlete " as it were gets rid of the wrong manor gives the cold shoulder to the bore

, , and " tackles , ' ' as old Jorum puts it , " an unsuspecting fellow , " the real hero , however , of her own little life drama . The difference between the ri ght man and the wrong man in a woman ' s eyes is very great , and always most important .

Now , as my readers will have guessed , unless they are very dense , that for poor Lucy the right man was Mr . Maiuwariug , the wrong man Mr . Williams , and so she

accordingly , like a wide-awake British maiden as she was , set herself calml y to work to meet the blushing Mr . Williams on his own ground , and if possible to give him his " coup-de-graco " before that Miss Margerison could come upon the scene . And so when our friend the

interesting aud energetic curate began in dulcet tones to speak confidingly and pleasantly to that goddess in blue and white , who sat before him in all her grace of '' golden youth , " he soon felt as all men feelas if by intuitionthat for some

, , reason or other his words fell flat on , and his special confidences were not reciprocated by the sympathies or attention of his graceful companion . Her eyes would not meet , bis .

Lucy clearl y cared nothing for his views and wants , his ideas or opinions , his words or his ways , and as she was a resolute young woman , and clear aud decided in her enunciation of what she thought and what she wished , and what she disliked

, poor Mr . Williams with a sigh gave up the struggle , and resigned nimself gracefully to the consolation of a coining luncheon , and the conversation of that " superior woman " Miss Margerison , when she kindly reappeared !

Sensible man ! And must we not say that Lucy behaved very well ? There is in her , we note , no weakness , as a friend of mine says , of " hand or mouth ; " she is not a flirt—she does not think it right to profess an interest she does not feel , or to avow a liking which is too surely unreal ! What an example to some fair young friends of mine !

They seem to look upon mau , as the law-books say , "ferai nature , " fair game , for that most dangerous of pastimes , the little innocent ; , harmless , tender flirtation ! They forget often , in these gay flirtations of theirsthat what is sport to them is often a

, deadly wound to the trusting and truehearted , and that what seems to them a legitimate amusement for the space of half-au-hour , may become the saddening " reverie " of a whole life !

Minnie Oompton met Harry Hig heover at a pleasant dance . Minnie was a blonde with bewitching blue eyes , golden hair , good hands , good teeth , good feet , and all that sort of thing . Harry Hi gheover was a reckless youth , who thought more of horses

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