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Article FREEMASONRY IN ENGLAND. ← Page 5 of 5 Article BROTHERLY LOVE. Page 1 of 6 →
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.
Freemasonry In England.
welfare of the Craftsmen employed , prove that the great honours paid to his character by the brethren , have not been misapplied . St . Albans was succeeded as Grand Master by Thomas Savage , Earl Rivers , who appointed Sir Christopher Wren Ms deputy , and he with the assistance of his wardens , " mannaged all things . " The Grand Wardens were Br . John Web , and Br . Grinliu Gibbons . ( To be continued . )
Brotherly Love.
BROTHERLY LOVE .
BY ALEX . HENRY GIRYEN , AUTHOR 0 ? "REGINALD SELWYN , " & c ( Continued from p . 107 . ) CHAPTER IX . —NEW FACES AND OLD SCENES . THE society in which Ida had been passing her time since her departure
from her mother ' s , was by no means congenial to her taste . Her hostess had at one time been her most intimate acquaintance , and closely resembled her in character ; but having married a gentleman of fortune , and mixing continually with only the gay world , she had lost those traits AA'hich recommended her to Ida , and from the modest and retiring maidenhad become a confident and dashing woman . But tlie kindness
, with . AA'hich Ida Avas welcomed , and tlie desire displayed to render her stay agreeable , made her overlook the alteration in her early friend and associate . Besides , there was a something in Madame Lefebre ' s manner occasionally that induced her to suspect she was not as happy as she appeared to be in society . She thought she detected a pensiveness underlying the surface of her levity of manner and seemingly high flow
of spirits , and an absence of mind amid the glitter and gaiety by which she was surrounded , that showed her spirit was not altogether absorbed by the artificial life which , she was leading . It had been whispered abroad that Monsieur Lefebre , who had formerly been aroue , had begun to treat Ms wife with indifference , and that she still retained an attachment for a young Lutheran , minister in the neighbour- ?
hood , named Jeune Grace , a cousin of hex husband . However , they appeared to live on fair matrimonial terms , rather at variance with this rumour ; and the gay circle in which they moved were too much occupied in pursuing their own enjoyments to trouble themselves with the joys or sorrows of their fashionable acquaintances .
Ida had now been three months with her friend , and she determined tq quit society which had no attraction for her unsophisticated mind . She considered the atmosphere she respired as artificial—a region of exotic and scent , not the fresh life to which she had been accustomed , and for winch the grace and refinement that mingled with its constitution could not compensate . But there was another circumstance which made her extremely desirous
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.
Freemasonry In England.
welfare of the Craftsmen employed , prove that the great honours paid to his character by the brethren , have not been misapplied . St . Albans was succeeded as Grand Master by Thomas Savage , Earl Rivers , who appointed Sir Christopher Wren Ms deputy , and he with the assistance of his wardens , " mannaged all things . " The Grand Wardens were Br . John Web , and Br . Grinliu Gibbons . ( To be continued . )
Brotherly Love.
BROTHERLY LOVE .
BY ALEX . HENRY GIRYEN , AUTHOR 0 ? "REGINALD SELWYN , " & c ( Continued from p . 107 . ) CHAPTER IX . —NEW FACES AND OLD SCENES . THE society in which Ida had been passing her time since her departure
from her mother ' s , was by no means congenial to her taste . Her hostess had at one time been her most intimate acquaintance , and closely resembled her in character ; but having married a gentleman of fortune , and mixing continually with only the gay world , she had lost those traits AA'hich recommended her to Ida , and from the modest and retiring maidenhad become a confident and dashing woman . But tlie kindness
, with . AA'hich Ida Avas welcomed , and tlie desire displayed to render her stay agreeable , made her overlook the alteration in her early friend and associate . Besides , there was a something in Madame Lefebre ' s manner occasionally that induced her to suspect she was not as happy as she appeared to be in society . She thought she detected a pensiveness underlying the surface of her levity of manner and seemingly high flow
of spirits , and an absence of mind amid the glitter and gaiety by which she was surrounded , that showed her spirit was not altogether absorbed by the artificial life which , she was leading . It had been whispered abroad that Monsieur Lefebre , who had formerly been aroue , had begun to treat Ms wife with indifference , and that she still retained an attachment for a young Lutheran , minister in the neighbour- ?
hood , named Jeune Grace , a cousin of hex husband . However , they appeared to live on fair matrimonial terms , rather at variance with this rumour ; and the gay circle in which they moved were too much occupied in pursuing their own enjoyments to trouble themselves with the joys or sorrows of their fashionable acquaintances .
Ida had now been three months with her friend , and she determined tq quit society which had no attraction for her unsophisticated mind . She considered the atmosphere she respired as artificial—a region of exotic and scent , not the fresh life to which she had been accustomed , and for winch the grace and refinement that mingled with its constitution could not compensate . But there was another circumstance which made her extremely desirous