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  • The Masonic Magazine
  • Jan. 1, 1877
  • Page 18
  • AN OLD, OLD STORY.
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The Masonic Magazine, Jan. 1, 1877: Page 18

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Page 18

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

By The "Sad Sea Waves."

Within my heart there is a sigh Which answers back thesea ' s low moan For , 0 my love , Ave are to part—To morrow I shall be alone ! 0 sweet have been the Summer days While we have wandered side by side ;

But darkness noAV overAvhelms my soul , Wrecked in the Avhirl of passion ' s tide . 1 did not dream Avhen first we met , That I could ever love thee so . But thou hast Avhiled my heart aAvay , And cans ' t noAV calmly bid me " Go . "

And tell me Avhen ' tis all too late , Another waits to call thee " Avife j " While I—0 , what is left for me 1 A lonely , aimless , ruined life ! Nay , girl , I Avould not blame thee , yet

'Tis hard to say that Avord " faiwell !" For in its utterance is breathed , O ' er all fond hopes a funeral knell , Years will roll on , and Summers fade Into the dun-gray Autumn ' s chill , And our tAvo paths lie Avide apart Until my heart grows cold and still 1

An Old, Old Story.

AN OLD , OLD STORY .

TIB rapture to lounge in such exquisite clover , To bask in the sunshine of QAvendolen ' s eyes ; With light-hearted Millie to be a gay rover , Or " spoon " to the music of Rosalie ' s sighs . " J . A . STEBRT , Boudoir Ballad ) . WHEN Miss Margerison returned to the

room , she savr at once that Lucy was very much bored , and Mr . Williams very much flustered . He looked red and perspiring , and had become nervous in manner , and rapid in ejaculation . And so that good woman set to work

to remove the boredom of the one , and the excitemeut of the other , by civil words and friendly looks . Very soon after this Colonel Mackintosh and Mr . Maimvaring were announced , Avith ill-suppressed satisfaction by Mr . Walters , and I think it

CHAPTER VI .

An Old, Old Story.

more than probable , by the manner of the two " entrants , " that that worthy individual had already expressed his opinion on matters in general , and Mr . Williams in particular , in words which greatl y amused those two excellent individuals .

Lucy Avas radiant in the extreme at this appearance of some allies on the field of battle , aud even Miss Margerison though greatly solicitous for " poor Mr . Williams , " did not at all refuse her habitual pleasant greeting to her ancient and her

youthful friend . Soon after luncheon was announced , and ere long the little party Avas full y doing justice to the well-spread table and the liberal bill of fare which ever prevailed at " The Cedars . "

But shortly after luncheon had disappeared , and the " quintette" had adjourned to the terrace for the fresh air , and two of the gentlemen for the " fragrant weed , " an unexpected little difficulty arose . It soon beeame clear that by some

taliamanic intuition , or some amatory Freemasonry , the two last comers had realized Lucy Longhurst ' s objection to the Curate ' s intrusion into their little domestic circle ,

and they equally resented Miss Margerison ' s invitation of him to their contemplated party at Richmond , for it had been an excursion proposed and planned by the two gentlemen , much to Lucy ' s satisfaction , and they had intended it to be a strict " partie carr § e . "

But five is an unequal and inconvenient number , and though , as Rory O'More sang , " There ' s luck in odd numbers , " yet it is extremely difficult to seat five comfortably at any table I have ever seen or can possibly conceive .

The fifth person , as Colonel Mackintosh was fond of saying , " creates a vacuum and produces a solecism . " Some of us may recall to-day , how many an innocent little scheme of ours has been frustrated by the inconvenient intrusion of

No . 5 . When her sister Annie had so consider * ately arranged that Henry Mortimer ( a parti , ) should sit vis-a-vis the pretty Edith Maxwell , in a quiet little party of four , Avhat a bore it was at the eleventh hour , to have that tiresome man , Mr . Doubleday , walk in , who would not take a hint , would not go away and would stay iov

“The Masonic Magazine: 1877-01-01, Page 18” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 24 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01011877/page/18/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
Monthly Masonic Summary. Article 2
FREEMASONRY IN ROME. Article 3
THE UNOPENED LETTER. Article 7
MASONIC NUMISMATICS. Article 7
THE ENCHANTED ISLE OF THE SEA. Article 10
LISTS OF OLD LODGES, No. 3. Article 13
A LIST OF THE WARRANTED LODGES Article 13
THE BIRTH OF THE ROSE. Article 17
BY THE "SAD SEA WAVES." Article 17
AN OLD, OLD STORY. Article 18
AN AMERICAN VINDICATION OF AMERICANS. Article 20
No. 194, UNDER THE "ANCIENTS" AND ITS RECORDS. Article 23
SONNET. Article 23
ALLHALLOWS, BREAD STREET. Article 24
GERARD MONTAGU: Article 26
FATHER FOY ON SECRET SOCIETIES. Article 29
SLEEP ON MY HEART. Article 34
PUT YOURSELF IN MY PLACE. Article 35
JOINING THE FREEMASONS. Article 37
THE PHILADELPHIA EXHIBITION. Article 39
LOVE'S UTTERANCE. Article 41
POETS' CORNER. Article 41
A PECULIAR CASE. Article 43
Our Archaeological Corner. Article 47
VULGARITY. Article 49
SONNET. Article 51
THE ORIGIN AND REFERENCES OF THE HERMESIAN SPURIOUS FREEMASONRY. Article 52
ADDRESS OF THE GRAND MASTER, J. H. GRAHAM, L.L.D., &c. Article 53
Reviews. Article 55
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE AND ART. Article 62
THE OBJECT OF A LIFE. Article 66
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Page 18

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

By The "Sad Sea Waves."

Within my heart there is a sigh Which answers back thesea ' s low moan For , 0 my love , Ave are to part—To morrow I shall be alone ! 0 sweet have been the Summer days While we have wandered side by side ;

But darkness noAV overAvhelms my soul , Wrecked in the Avhirl of passion ' s tide . 1 did not dream Avhen first we met , That I could ever love thee so . But thou hast Avhiled my heart aAvay , And cans ' t noAV calmly bid me " Go . "

And tell me Avhen ' tis all too late , Another waits to call thee " Avife j " While I—0 , what is left for me 1 A lonely , aimless , ruined life ! Nay , girl , I Avould not blame thee , yet

'Tis hard to say that Avord " faiwell !" For in its utterance is breathed , O ' er all fond hopes a funeral knell , Years will roll on , and Summers fade Into the dun-gray Autumn ' s chill , And our tAvo paths lie Avide apart Until my heart grows cold and still 1

An Old, Old Story.

AN OLD , OLD STORY .

TIB rapture to lounge in such exquisite clover , To bask in the sunshine of QAvendolen ' s eyes ; With light-hearted Millie to be a gay rover , Or " spoon " to the music of Rosalie ' s sighs . " J . A . STEBRT , Boudoir Ballad ) . WHEN Miss Margerison returned to the

room , she savr at once that Lucy was very much bored , and Mr . Williams very much flustered . He looked red and perspiring , and had become nervous in manner , and rapid in ejaculation . And so that good woman set to work

to remove the boredom of the one , and the excitemeut of the other , by civil words and friendly looks . Very soon after this Colonel Mackintosh and Mr . Maimvaring were announced , Avith ill-suppressed satisfaction by Mr . Walters , and I think it

CHAPTER VI .

An Old, Old Story.

more than probable , by the manner of the two " entrants , " that that worthy individual had already expressed his opinion on matters in general , and Mr . Williams in particular , in words which greatl y amused those two excellent individuals .

Lucy Avas radiant in the extreme at this appearance of some allies on the field of battle , aud even Miss Margerison though greatly solicitous for " poor Mr . Williams , " did not at all refuse her habitual pleasant greeting to her ancient and her

youthful friend . Soon after luncheon was announced , and ere long the little party Avas full y doing justice to the well-spread table and the liberal bill of fare which ever prevailed at " The Cedars . "

But shortly after luncheon had disappeared , and the " quintette" had adjourned to the terrace for the fresh air , and two of the gentlemen for the " fragrant weed , " an unexpected little difficulty arose . It soon beeame clear that by some

taliamanic intuition , or some amatory Freemasonry , the two last comers had realized Lucy Longhurst ' s objection to the Curate ' s intrusion into their little domestic circle ,

and they equally resented Miss Margerison ' s invitation of him to their contemplated party at Richmond , for it had been an excursion proposed and planned by the two gentlemen , much to Lucy ' s satisfaction , and they had intended it to be a strict " partie carr § e . "

But five is an unequal and inconvenient number , and though , as Rory O'More sang , " There ' s luck in odd numbers , " yet it is extremely difficult to seat five comfortably at any table I have ever seen or can possibly conceive .

The fifth person , as Colonel Mackintosh was fond of saying , " creates a vacuum and produces a solecism . " Some of us may recall to-day , how many an innocent little scheme of ours has been frustrated by the inconvenient intrusion of

No . 5 . When her sister Annie had so consider * ately arranged that Henry Mortimer ( a parti , ) should sit vis-a-vis the pretty Edith Maxwell , in a quiet little party of four , Avhat a bore it was at the eleventh hour , to have that tiresome man , Mr . Doubleday , walk in , who would not take a hint , would not go away and would stay iov

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