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  • May 1, 1874
  • Page 7
  • BOOKSTORE PRIORY.
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The Masonic Magazine, May 1, 1874: Page 7

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Page 7

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Bookstore Priory.

bright tell-tale blood , which would rush so madly to her cheeks at the unexpected sound of his voice or footstep . He took his hat from tho peg and together they started . He had watched and waited for this

opportunity to be alone with her , and he meant to make tho most of it now that he had gained it ; nevertheless his heart felt very sad and heavy , as though oppressed by the shadow of a coming failure . Ho thought it next to impossible that she in

all her bright young loveliness could ever care for him , sightless , and ten years her senior . Still there would lie no harm in speaking Out ; no harm in telling her that he loved her fondly . It was not long before they came to Alice ' s favourite spot ; a shadowed nook where the trees were thickest , and a

meandering brook widest ; where tho pure white water-lilies sailed palely on the surface , and the minnows in countless shoals 'floated swiftly down with the stream . This afternoon everything was very still and peaceful in the glare of the glittering sunshine .

Alice seated herself upon her campstool , and Lowndes threw himself on the gra -s at her feet . She opened her hook , but not a word did she read . Never before had Lowndes been so silent , and somehow Alice felt that something out of

the ordinary way was going to happen , for either weal or woo—she could not tell which . Never before had her heart fluttered so restlessly , nor the beautiful colour in her cheeks faded and then glowed again so rapidly . A silence , that neither dared to break seemed to have fallen on them both .

Lowndes broke it . " Alice ! " It was the first time that ho had called her by her Christian name ... She was not in the least surprised . " Yes , Mr . Forrester , " she said faintly . He got ii ]) from the grass then , and ,

coming behind her , laid his hand gently upon her shoulder . " Alice , " he said very earnestly , and his strong voice shook , " I love you ! Pity ray great weakness ; have pity , oh , my dear love , and be my wife 1 "

Her head drooped low on her breastdrooped as do the Jlowrets in the warmth , of the too generous sun . Thankful , . happytears sprang up and trembled on her lashes .

Her bosom heaved—for ho loved her How great a happiness was hers ! She did not speak ; she could find no words in which to answer him . ; but she wanted to make him understand that it could not be ; the social gulf was too cruelly witle . A et

for all that her happincss . was great , andshe . loved him . " AVon't you say one word to me , dear 1 " Drawing in a long trembling breath , site rose from her camp-stool and stood infront of him .

"Lowndes , " she whispered , dwelling with unutterable fondness on Ids name , and clasping her hands together with a little passionate hopeless gesture , "I do love you ; love you with all my soul , but—but it cannot be . "

She burst into tears . But ho in his passion had caught her to his breast , and was straining her there as though he could never part with her more . " My darling , my thirling , my own love !" he cried , almost wild with joy . "A ou are my own now ; nothing shall over part us !" "Let mo go , Mr . Forrester , " pleaded

Miss AVest between her sobs , thinking now that she had gone too far . " You must not ; indeed you must not ! Please let me go . " " And you say yon love me , child !" " Yes , yes . " " Then what do you meanmy darling ?"

, " AVhat would the world say V said she , faintly , and still struggling to free herself from his winding embrace . " The world ! " he repeated , scornfully . " It has forgotten mo . AVo parted nine years ago . I know tho exact worth of its

prejudice and hollow flatteries . But , with you by my side , my little darling , 1 will face it again . Perhaps , after all , it is not so bad . Oh , my dear love , " he continued , "don't lie cruel ; I love you very , very clearly . Alan as I am , I think it would

break my heart wore you to cast me off and give mo no hope . 1 never knew until this moment how much 1 loved you . Say < Ye- * , " Alice —« ay ' A ' es . ' No man will ever love you so dearly as I . " . The temptation was great ; what should she say to him ? It was sweet indeed to feel his arms around her . She knew not

what to do . "It is because I am blind ! " cried Lowndes , with exceeding bitterness , while .

“The Masonic Magazine: 1874-05-01, Page 7” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 3 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01051874/page/7/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
Monthly Masonic Summary. Article 1
THE INITIATION OF PRINCE ARTHUR INTO FREEMASONRY. Article 2
THE AREA ROUND ST. PAUL'S. Article 3
THE OLD MASONIC POEM. Article 3
BOOKSTORE PRIORY. Article 5
THE LIFE OF BRO. GEORGE OLIVER, D.D. Article 8
THE NEW MORALITY, 1874. Article 11
A COOL PROPOSAL. Article 12
ROYAL ARCH ADDRESS. Article 14
MODERN MEANINGS TO OLD WORDS. Article 17
ROMAN CATHOLICISM AND FREEMASONRY.—THE CHATHAM OUTRAGE. Article 17
THE MYSTIC TIE. Article 21
PUZZLES. Article 21
Reviews. Article 24
WEARING THE MASONIC EMBLEMS. Article 25
SYMBOL LANGUAGE. Article 26
FREEMASONRY AS A CONSERVATOR OF THE ARTS AND SCIENCES. Article 26
A SPEECH BY MARK TWAIN. Article 29
READING MASONS AT HOME AND ABROAD. Article 30
Our Archaeological Corner. Article 30
Questions and Answers. Article 31
Monthly Odds and Ends. Article 31
TOO GOOD TO BE LOST. Article 32
ADVICE . Article 32
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Bookstore Priory.

bright tell-tale blood , which would rush so madly to her cheeks at the unexpected sound of his voice or footstep . He took his hat from tho peg and together they started . He had watched and waited for this

opportunity to be alone with her , and he meant to make tho most of it now that he had gained it ; nevertheless his heart felt very sad and heavy , as though oppressed by the shadow of a coming failure . Ho thought it next to impossible that she in

all her bright young loveliness could ever care for him , sightless , and ten years her senior . Still there would lie no harm in speaking Out ; no harm in telling her that he loved her fondly . It was not long before they came to Alice ' s favourite spot ; a shadowed nook where the trees were thickest , and a

meandering brook widest ; where tho pure white water-lilies sailed palely on the surface , and the minnows in countless shoals 'floated swiftly down with the stream . This afternoon everything was very still and peaceful in the glare of the glittering sunshine .

Alice seated herself upon her campstool , and Lowndes threw himself on the gra -s at her feet . She opened her hook , but not a word did she read . Never before had Lowndes been so silent , and somehow Alice felt that something out of

the ordinary way was going to happen , for either weal or woo—she could not tell which . Never before had her heart fluttered so restlessly , nor the beautiful colour in her cheeks faded and then glowed again so rapidly . A silence , that neither dared to break seemed to have fallen on them both .

Lowndes broke it . " Alice ! " It was the first time that ho had called her by her Christian name ... She was not in the least surprised . " Yes , Mr . Forrester , " she said faintly . He got ii ]) from the grass then , and ,

coming behind her , laid his hand gently upon her shoulder . " Alice , " he said very earnestly , and his strong voice shook , " I love you ! Pity ray great weakness ; have pity , oh , my dear love , and be my wife 1 "

Her head drooped low on her breastdrooped as do the Jlowrets in the warmth , of the too generous sun . Thankful , . happytears sprang up and trembled on her lashes .

Her bosom heaved—for ho loved her How great a happiness was hers ! She did not speak ; she could find no words in which to answer him . ; but she wanted to make him understand that it could not be ; the social gulf was too cruelly witle . A et

for all that her happincss . was great , andshe . loved him . " AVon't you say one word to me , dear 1 " Drawing in a long trembling breath , site rose from her camp-stool and stood infront of him .

"Lowndes , " she whispered , dwelling with unutterable fondness on Ids name , and clasping her hands together with a little passionate hopeless gesture , "I do love you ; love you with all my soul , but—but it cannot be . "

She burst into tears . But ho in his passion had caught her to his breast , and was straining her there as though he could never part with her more . " My darling , my thirling , my own love !" he cried , almost wild with joy . "A ou are my own now ; nothing shall over part us !" "Let mo go , Mr . Forrester , " pleaded

Miss AVest between her sobs , thinking now that she had gone too far . " You must not ; indeed you must not ! Please let me go . " " And you say yon love me , child !" " Yes , yes . " " Then what do you meanmy darling ?"

, " AVhat would the world say V said she , faintly , and still struggling to free herself from his winding embrace . " The world ! " he repeated , scornfully . " It has forgotten mo . AVo parted nine years ago . I know tho exact worth of its

prejudice and hollow flatteries . But , with you by my side , my little darling , 1 will face it again . Perhaps , after all , it is not so bad . Oh , my dear love , " he continued , "don't lie cruel ; I love you very , very clearly . Alan as I am , I think it would

break my heart wore you to cast me off and give mo no hope . 1 never knew until this moment how much 1 loved you . Say < Ye- * , " Alice —« ay ' A ' es . ' No man will ever love you so dearly as I . " . The temptation was great ; what should she say to him ? It was sweet indeed to feel his arms around her . She knew not

what to do . "It is because I am blind ! " cried Lowndes , with exceeding bitterness , while .

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