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  • The Masonic Magazine
  • Dec. 1, 1876
  • Page 34
  • GERARD MONTAGU;
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The Masonic Magazine, Dec. 1, 1876: Page 34

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Gerard Montagu;

batch is wanted to swamp the Lords on some Liberal question . The present Lord is twice as proud and haughty as a De Courcy , a Stanley , a Howard , or a Percy . Another noble Lord ' s grandfather was a lawyer , and becomes Lord Chancellor , he

marries his cook , and his grandson figures in the Divorce Court . Or , perhaps , the descendant of twenty Earls , an effete gentleman , who boasts of his blue blood obtained throug h marrying in and in for ten generations , until it has become , shall I say ichor , falls in love and marries a pretty actress , and the result is the azure becomes more

like crimson , and the brains of the new generation are improved in quality , whilst the physical man is improved in tone . I have had some experience , and I say this , that in these days money is everything , blood and birth nothing . A man with

money can aspire , to anyone ! " By the bye , Gerard , I think yon said you knew Lord Chelmondiston , Lady Muriel's relative ? " I put in . "Well , I ' don't know much of him . The first time I met him it was a queer business . "

" You don't say so ?" " Yes I do . I was then in business at South Wrington , and was going home to Barton , where I lodged , about two miles off . Abbot Wrington is an old town in the north of England , standing out on a

peninsula , and jutting out into the sea . South Wrington , the new town , lies more hack and stretches away to the South , rather towards Barton , which is a little watering place , you know . There arc large iron works at South Wrington , and at

the time I speak of the men were out on strike . Some of them were desperate looking fellows , and I thought I would rather not meet any of them on a dark ni ght . Well I had been on drill ( I was a full

, Private in our Artillery Corps ) and we strolled into the principal hotel afterwards to have a smoke and a glass of grog before going home , for it was a cold night in December . Lord Chelmondiston had been ° n drill too but to tell the truth he was

; gather a fast fellow at that time . Its now joui' years ago he was only—19 or 20—and : daresay he ' s altered now . At any rate « e went off to the Theatre with Menzies , ° ne of our Captains , and a regular tnft

hunter by the way . Where they went afterwards I don ' t know ; but I left the hotel a little before 12 ( it was before Brace ' s act you see ) and was on my way home when I heard the sound of some one riding furiously behind me . The tide was

up , and I could'nt get by the sands , which were always covered at high water , and there was nothing for it but to go over the sand hills—or bents as they call them in the North , which in the darkness was not pleasantthey are so full of pit falls .

, Well , I thought this fellow must be either mad or a fool , or he would not come pounding along at this pace such a night as this and in such a place . However , be passed me at a galop , yelling out as he went by a drunken " Tally ho . " Fearing something

would be sure to happen , I hurried after him as fast as I could , and 1 don ' t suppose I had gone another hundred yards before I heard a cry of ' Help ! ' Sure enough his Lordship is down , 1 thought , lucky for him its soft sand and not hard boulder . I ran on as fust as I could as I heard

another cry , and by Jove , there he was pitched off the horse on to bis head , aud two fellows trying to rob him . I recognised one of them as a man I had seen at the Iron Works , and before he could say Jack Robinson , I had given him a

crack with the flat of my sword-bayonet , which sent him down like a shot . The other fellow was off in quick sticks , and luckily we were not far from a lonely farm , known as Carr House , which stands midway between Barton and West Wrington ,

and I was able to call assistance and get him in . His collar bone was out , but we got him removed in a few days to the Castle , aud my dear old friend , Dr . Evans , ( a first class fellow ) attended him , and soon pulled him through . I think it did

him good , you know ; I don't believe he ' s been drunk since . " " Sharp lesson , certainly . Lueky you were in the way it strikes me ; " Falconbridge remarks . " Was be going home t" I asked . " Well , he thought he was I suppose ; but the fact is if be had gone much farther he would have found himself in the

German Ocean I suspect . " What became of the fellow you knocked down 1 " said Falconbridge . " Oh , him ? " James Beard , 1 remem-T

“The Masonic Magazine: 1876-12-01, Page 34” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 11 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01121876/page/34/.
  • 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 34

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

Gerard Montagu;

batch is wanted to swamp the Lords on some Liberal question . The present Lord is twice as proud and haughty as a De Courcy , a Stanley , a Howard , or a Percy . Another noble Lord ' s grandfather was a lawyer , and becomes Lord Chancellor , he

marries his cook , and his grandson figures in the Divorce Court . Or , perhaps , the descendant of twenty Earls , an effete gentleman , who boasts of his blue blood obtained throug h marrying in and in for ten generations , until it has become , shall I say ichor , falls in love and marries a pretty actress , and the result is the azure becomes more

like crimson , and the brains of the new generation are improved in quality , whilst the physical man is improved in tone . I have had some experience , and I say this , that in these days money is everything , blood and birth nothing . A man with

money can aspire , to anyone ! " By the bye , Gerard , I think yon said you knew Lord Chelmondiston , Lady Muriel's relative ? " I put in . "Well , I ' don't know much of him . The first time I met him it was a queer business . "

" You don't say so ?" " Yes I do . I was then in business at South Wrington , and was going home to Barton , where I lodged , about two miles off . Abbot Wrington is an old town in the north of England , standing out on a

peninsula , and jutting out into the sea . South Wrington , the new town , lies more hack and stretches away to the South , rather towards Barton , which is a little watering place , you know . There arc large iron works at South Wrington , and at

the time I speak of the men were out on strike . Some of them were desperate looking fellows , and I thought I would rather not meet any of them on a dark ni ght . Well I had been on drill ( I was a full

, Private in our Artillery Corps ) and we strolled into the principal hotel afterwards to have a smoke and a glass of grog before going home , for it was a cold night in December . Lord Chelmondiston had been ° n drill too but to tell the truth he was

; gather a fast fellow at that time . Its now joui' years ago he was only—19 or 20—and : daresay he ' s altered now . At any rate « e went off to the Theatre with Menzies , ° ne of our Captains , and a regular tnft

hunter by the way . Where they went afterwards I don ' t know ; but I left the hotel a little before 12 ( it was before Brace ' s act you see ) and was on my way home when I heard the sound of some one riding furiously behind me . The tide was

up , and I could'nt get by the sands , which were always covered at high water , and there was nothing for it but to go over the sand hills—or bents as they call them in the North , which in the darkness was not pleasantthey are so full of pit falls .

, Well , I thought this fellow must be either mad or a fool , or he would not come pounding along at this pace such a night as this and in such a place . However , be passed me at a galop , yelling out as he went by a drunken " Tally ho . " Fearing something

would be sure to happen , I hurried after him as fast as I could , and 1 don ' t suppose I had gone another hundred yards before I heard a cry of ' Help ! ' Sure enough his Lordship is down , 1 thought , lucky for him its soft sand and not hard boulder . I ran on as fust as I could as I heard

another cry , and by Jove , there he was pitched off the horse on to bis head , aud two fellows trying to rob him . I recognised one of them as a man I had seen at the Iron Works , and before he could say Jack Robinson , I had given him a

crack with the flat of my sword-bayonet , which sent him down like a shot . The other fellow was off in quick sticks , and luckily we were not far from a lonely farm , known as Carr House , which stands midway between Barton and West Wrington ,

and I was able to call assistance and get him in . His collar bone was out , but we got him removed in a few days to the Castle , aud my dear old friend , Dr . Evans , ( a first class fellow ) attended him , and soon pulled him through . I think it did

him good , you know ; I don't believe he ' s been drunk since . " " Sharp lesson , certainly . Lueky you were in the way it strikes me ; " Falconbridge remarks . " Was be going home t" I asked . " Well , he thought he was I suppose ; but the fact is if be had gone much farther he would have found himself in the

German Ocean I suspect . " What became of the fellow you knocked down 1 " said Falconbridge . " Oh , him ? " James Beard , 1 remem-T

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