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  • The Masonic Magazine
  • Jan. 1, 1876
  • Page 23
  • UNDER CURRENTS.
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The Masonic Magazine, Jan. 1, 1876: Page 23

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    Article WOMAN'S CHOICE —THE STORY OF A HERO. ← Page 6 of 6
    Article UNDER CURRENTS. Page 1 of 3 →
Page 23

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

Woman's Choice —The Story Of A Hero.

be present , who Avould try the challenger ' s mettle ; ancl Avith a gayand meaning g lance at the iady , who stood at the hall door with Claire , he galloped off Avith his attendants . N . T . Dispatch .

Under Currents.

UNDER CURRENTS .

THOSE of us AVIIO have ever loitered by the classic shores Avhich , some eloquent writer tells us , "the blue Mediterranean laves , " or have sailed complacently on its fair expanse , are Avell aware that there is in some parts of the Mediterranean , and especially in the Straits of

Gibraltar—, though everywhere , in truth more or less , — an under current of great strength ancl greater rapidity . You may be apparently moving on sloAvly through the froivning Straits , and have left the pillars of Hercules behind you , as you think ; you may be

hoping soon to pass Tarifa , and catch a glimpse of the white walls and houses . of Cadiz , to say nothing of the young ladies immortalised by Lord Byron , when , lo ancl behold ! all the Avhile , a hidden force is making you drift irresistibly upon African reefs .

It has often occurred to me IIOAV true this description still is of society ; the very society in Avhich we live and die , and spend our hurrying years , and in Avhich Ave develope our normal and our moral being . HOAV often , for instance , all is fair and calm

on the surface , like the deceitful ocean , sometimes before a gale , where all is smooth as g lass , still as a " duck-pond , " only to be folloAved by tho tempestuous hurricane . So in society , you may be at ease , and full of fun and security and yet all the Avhile there is an under current of difficulty or danger of detraction or intri gue hard at work .

People often act very strangely , aud to say the truth , very dirtily in society . They nccept all your hospitality , they enjoy all your good things , they praise your children ancl your champagne , your dinner and your daughtersyour house and horses

, your , your pictures and your pine-apples ; they laud the Avife of your bosom , and laugh a " t your OAVII little jokes , aud yet all the while they are burnishing up the barbed arrow of illnatured gossip , or preparing the pointed shaft of agreeable detraction !

They leave your house smiling and ko-tooing to the last , " Never spent s delightful an evening , " " HOAV charming th party has been , " such are their sweet aim friendly words of adieu . Nay , they eA'e add , as if by way of a Parthian compliment "HOAV charming clear Jemima is looking "

, " How much little Puggy has groAvn . " But if you could hear their coiiA'ersation as they Avend their homeAvard Avay , and Avhen they have reached the Briton ' s castle , hoAV your face would redden and your ears Avould tingle .

Round the fire in the draAving-room , the girls tear to pieces the dress of your Avife , ancl the corsage of your daughters . Jones says to Buggius , over a glass of Avhiskey toddy , " By-the-Avay B , Avhat deuced bad

sherry Popkms gave us to-day , 2 is . dinnei sherry and no mistake ; ancl as for the champagne , it Avas supper champagne at 2 Gs . Give me a little more of that Ghnlivat , old boy , " Mrs . Buggins , as she begins her curtain lectureasks Buggins . whopoor felloAV ,

, , wants to go to sleep , if he does not think that Mrs . Popkins is getting very coarse and fat , and dresses very badly , and that her daughters are A'ery fast 1 To all of which Buggins only replies by a subdued snore . Thus all your labour has been in vainall

, your expense and " agremeus" have been thrown away , the under current of society has SAvept your little bark on to the hidden reefs of its dirty and treacherous lee-shore .

Or again , there is young Tri ptolermis Jones who thinks that he is getting on in society and the Avorld ; and so , in a fashion he is . He is fairly off , well got up , not altogether ill-informed , ancl tries to make

himself agreeable . He fancies that he pleases the ladies especially . He has certainly made one or two hits , and has raised a merry laugh from Matilda Trotter and a i-inging echo from Emily Lane . Even Bolsover , Avho is always jealous of

him , condescended to smile ; aud old Mrs . MclA'er ( not the Flora of p leasant memory ) took a pinch of snuff—she really did—the old gal , and remarked , " Varra Avoel for a young mon . " ' So Jones goes home radiant and happy . Poor fellow 1 Emily Lane , in the mean Avhile , h ? tsaid

“The Masonic Magazine: 1876-01-01, Page 23” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 31 March 2023, masonicperiodicals.org/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01011876/page/23/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
Monthly Masonic Summary. Article 2
THE HONBLE MRS. ALDWORTH. Article 3
THE ORIGIN AND REFERENCES OF THE HERMESIAN SPURIOUS FREEMASONRY. Article 4
THE MASONIC SIGN. Article 6
AN INDIAN MASONIC WELCOME TO OUR GRAND MASTER. Article 7
LIGHTS AND SHADOWS OF SCOTTISH FREEMASONRY. Article 8
BYE-LAWS OF THE YORK LODGE: No. 236. Article 10
EARLY MEETINGS OF THE GRAND LODGE OF ENGLAND. Article 14
CURFEW MUST NOT RING TO-NIGHT. Article 16
THE FREEMASONS AND ARCHTECTURE IN ENGLAND. Article 17
WOMAN'S CHOICE —THE STORY OF A HERO. Article 18
UNDER CURRENTS. Article 23
THE LAST WISH. Article 25
NOTES ON THE OLD MINUTE BOOKS OF THE BRITISH UNION LODGE, NO. 114, IPSWICH. AD. 1762. Article 25
AN ORIGINAL TOAST, Article 30
SONNET. Article 30
A WORD TO THE WISE. Article 31
CONTEMPORARY LETTERS ON THE FRENCH REVOLUTION. Article 32
THE NEW YEAR. Article 35
THE WIDOW'S STRATAGEM. Article 36
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART. Article 39
ADDRESS OF THE V. H. AND E. SIR KT. COL. W. J. B. MACLEOD MOORE, Article 43
THE SITE OF SOLOMON'S TEMPLE DISCOVERED. Article 45
Review. Article 48
SONNET. Article 49
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Page 23

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

Woman's Choice —The Story Of A Hero.

be present , who Avould try the challenger ' s mettle ; ancl Avith a gayand meaning g lance at the iady , who stood at the hall door with Claire , he galloped off Avith his attendants . N . T . Dispatch .

Under Currents.

UNDER CURRENTS .

THOSE of us AVIIO have ever loitered by the classic shores Avhich , some eloquent writer tells us , "the blue Mediterranean laves , " or have sailed complacently on its fair expanse , are Avell aware that there is in some parts of the Mediterranean , and especially in the Straits of

Gibraltar—, though everywhere , in truth more or less , — an under current of great strength ancl greater rapidity . You may be apparently moving on sloAvly through the froivning Straits , and have left the pillars of Hercules behind you , as you think ; you may be

hoping soon to pass Tarifa , and catch a glimpse of the white walls and houses . of Cadiz , to say nothing of the young ladies immortalised by Lord Byron , when , lo ancl behold ! all the Avhile , a hidden force is making you drift irresistibly upon African reefs .

It has often occurred to me IIOAV true this description still is of society ; the very society in Avhich we live and die , and spend our hurrying years , and in Avhich Ave develope our normal and our moral being . HOAV often , for instance , all is fair and calm

on the surface , like the deceitful ocean , sometimes before a gale , where all is smooth as g lass , still as a " duck-pond , " only to be folloAved by tho tempestuous hurricane . So in society , you may be at ease , and full of fun and security and yet all the Avhile there is an under current of difficulty or danger of detraction or intri gue hard at work .

People often act very strangely , aud to say the truth , very dirtily in society . They nccept all your hospitality , they enjoy all your good things , they praise your children ancl your champagne , your dinner and your daughtersyour house and horses

, your , your pictures and your pine-apples ; they laud the Avife of your bosom , and laugh a " t your OAVII little jokes , aud yet all the while they are burnishing up the barbed arrow of illnatured gossip , or preparing the pointed shaft of agreeable detraction !

They leave your house smiling and ko-tooing to the last , " Never spent s delightful an evening , " " HOAV charming th party has been , " such are their sweet aim friendly words of adieu . Nay , they eA'e add , as if by way of a Parthian compliment "HOAV charming clear Jemima is looking "

, " How much little Puggy has groAvn . " But if you could hear their coiiA'ersation as they Avend their homeAvard Avay , and Avhen they have reached the Briton ' s castle , hoAV your face would redden and your ears Avould tingle .

Round the fire in the draAving-room , the girls tear to pieces the dress of your Avife , ancl the corsage of your daughters . Jones says to Buggius , over a glass of Avhiskey toddy , " By-the-Avay B , Avhat deuced bad

sherry Popkms gave us to-day , 2 is . dinnei sherry and no mistake ; ancl as for the champagne , it Avas supper champagne at 2 Gs . Give me a little more of that Ghnlivat , old boy , " Mrs . Buggins , as she begins her curtain lectureasks Buggins . whopoor felloAV ,

, , wants to go to sleep , if he does not think that Mrs . Popkins is getting very coarse and fat , and dresses very badly , and that her daughters are A'ery fast 1 To all of which Buggins only replies by a subdued snore . Thus all your labour has been in vainall

, your expense and " agremeus" have been thrown away , the under current of society has SAvept your little bark on to the hidden reefs of its dirty and treacherous lee-shore .

Or again , there is young Tri ptolermis Jones who thinks that he is getting on in society and the Avorld ; and so , in a fashion he is . He is fairly off , well got up , not altogether ill-informed , ancl tries to make

himself agreeable . He fancies that he pleases the ladies especially . He has certainly made one or two hits , and has raised a merry laugh from Matilda Trotter and a i-inging echo from Emily Lane . Even Bolsover , Avho is always jealous of

him , condescended to smile ; aud old Mrs . MclA'er ( not the Flora of p leasant memory ) took a pinch of snuff—she really did—the old gal , and remarked , " Varra Avoel for a young mon . " ' So Jones goes home radiant and happy . Poor fellow 1 Emily Lane , in the mean Avhile , h ? tsaid

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