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    Article CATHERINE CARMICHAEL; on, THREE YEARS RUNNING. ← Page 6 of 15 →
Page 55

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

Catherine Carmichael; On, Three Years Running.

" He is a lazy skunk . " " Who is to get the wood ? " " What's that to you ? When you were down at Hokitika you could got wood for yourself . '' Not another word was said , and for a week she did cut the wood . After that , there came a lad who had been shepherding , and was now well-nigh idiotic ; but with such assistance as Catherine could give him , he did manage to hew the wood and draw

the water . Then one day a great announcement was made to her . "Next week John Carmichael will be here . " " -, John !" "Yes ; why not John ? He will have that room . If he wants a boil , he must bring it with him . " When this was said November had come round again , and . it wanted about six weeks to Christmas .

CHAPTER II . CHRISTMAS DAY . SO . 2 . JOHN CARMICHAEL was to come ! Ancl she understood that he was to come there as a resident;—for Peter had spoken of the use of that bedroom as though it were . to

be permanent . With no direct telling , but by degrees , something of the circumstances of the run at Warriwa had become known to her . There were on it 15 , 000 sheep ,- and these , with the lease of the run , were supposed to be worth £ 15 , 000 . The sheep and all were the property of , her husband . Some years ago he had taken John , when he was a boy , to act with him as his foreman or assistant , and the arrangement had been continued till the quarrel had sprung up . Peter had more than once declared his

purpose of leaving all that he possessed to the young man , and John had never doubted his word . But , in return for all this future wealth , it was expected , not only that the lad should be his slave , but that the lad , grown into a man , should remain so as long as Peter might live . As Peter was likely to live for the next twenty years , and as the slavery was hard to bear , John had quarrelled with his kinsman , and had gone away to the diggings . Nowit seemedthe quarrel had been arrangedand John wag to come

, , , back to Warriwa . That some one was needed to ride round among the four or five shepherds , —some one beyond Peter himself , —some one to overlook the shearing , some one to attend to the young lambs , some one to see that the water-holes did not run dry ,, had become manifest even to Kate herself . It had leaked out from Peter's dry mouth that some one must come , ancl now she was told that'John Carmichael would return to his old home .

Though she hated her husband , Kate knew what was due to him . Hating him as she had learned to do , hating him as she acknowledged to herself that she did , still she had endeavoured to do her duty by him . She coulci not smile upon him , she could not even speak to him with a kind voice ; but she coulcl make his bed , and iron his shirts , and cook his dinner , ancl see that the things confided to her charge were not destroyed by the old woman or the idiot boy . Perhaps he got from her all he wanted to get . He

did not complain that her voice was not loving . He was harsh , odious in his ways with her , sometimes almost violent ; but it may be doubted whether he would have been less so had she attempted to turn him by any show of false affection . She had learned to feel that if she served him she did for him all that he required , and that duty demanded no more . But now ! would not duty demand more from her now ? . Since she had been brought home to Warriwashe had iven herself freelto

, g up y her thoughts , telling herself boldly that she hated her husband , and that she loved that other man . She told herself , also , that there was no breach of dut y in this . She would never again see that other man . He had crossed her path and had gone . There was nothing for her left in the world , except her husband Peter and Warriwa . As for her

“The Masonic Magazine: 1879-06-01, Page 55” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 11 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01061879/page/55/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
TRANSMISSION OF MASONIC ART AND SYMBOLISM IN THE FOURTH CENTURY. Article 1
A QUEER CAREER. Article 6
THE PAST. Article 18
A PERFECTLY AWFULLY LOVELY POEM. Article 19
TO ARTHUR . Article 20
ARE YOU A MASTER MASON ? Article 21
THE LITERARY EXPERIENCES OF A YOUNG MAN WITH A FUTURE. Article 26
HERMES TRISMEGISTUS. Article 27
A CATALOGUE OF MASONIC BOOKS IN THE BRITISH MUSEUM. Article 29
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART. Article 36
GOTHIC ARCHITECTURE.* Article 42
ST. ALBAN'S CATHEDRAL. Article 46
TO HOPE. Article 48
THE DEPUTY GRAND MASTER OF ENGLAND. Article 49
CATHERINE CARMICHAEL; on, THREE YEARS RUNNING. Article 50
CHRISTMAS, 1878. Article 64
SONNET. Article 65
LIST OF "ANCIENT LODGES," 1813, WITH THEIR NUMBERS IN 1814, 1832, AND 1863. Article 66
THREE CHRISTMAS EVES. Article 73
GRADUS AD OPUS CAEMENTITIUM. Article 80
HOW I WAS FIRST PREPARED TO BE MADE A MASON. Article 83
CHRISTMAS DAY ON BOARD HER MAJESTY'S SHIP "NONSUCH." Article 92
A PHILOLOGICAL FANCY Article 95
ALONE. Article 97
DESCRIPTION OF A CHURCH SITUATED IN FORT MANOEL, MALTA, IN WHICH ARE SEVERAL INTERESTING MASONIC ILLUSTRATIONS. Article 98
THE LOVING CUP: OR, HOW THE DUSTMEN WERE DIDDLED. Article 102
A CHRISTMAS DAY BEFORE THE ENEMY. Article 105
GERMAN MASONIC TEACHING ONE HUNDRED YEARS AGO. Article 108
A MEMORY. Article 111
ROB MOORSON. Article 112
PARTED. Article 120
THE MAP OF EUROPE IN 1879. Article 121
SOME ACCOUNT OF THE LODGE OF ANTIQUITY, NO. 146, BOLTON. Article 124
AN UNKNOWN WATERING-PLACE. Article 127
SHAKSPERE, HIS FRIENDS AND ACQUAINTANCES. Article 131
SKETCHES OF CHARACTER. Article 138
SONNET. Article 139
THE VOLITATIONIST. Article 139
A SIMILE. Article 144
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Page 55

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

Catherine Carmichael; On, Three Years Running.

" He is a lazy skunk . " " Who is to get the wood ? " " What's that to you ? When you were down at Hokitika you could got wood for yourself . '' Not another word was said , and for a week she did cut the wood . After that , there came a lad who had been shepherding , and was now well-nigh idiotic ; but with such assistance as Catherine could give him , he did manage to hew the wood and draw

the water . Then one day a great announcement was made to her . "Next week John Carmichael will be here . " " -, John !" "Yes ; why not John ? He will have that room . If he wants a boil , he must bring it with him . " When this was said November had come round again , and . it wanted about six weeks to Christmas .

CHAPTER II . CHRISTMAS DAY . SO . 2 . JOHN CARMICHAEL was to come ! Ancl she understood that he was to come there as a resident;—for Peter had spoken of the use of that bedroom as though it were . to

be permanent . With no direct telling , but by degrees , something of the circumstances of the run at Warriwa had become known to her . There were on it 15 , 000 sheep ,- and these , with the lease of the run , were supposed to be worth £ 15 , 000 . The sheep and all were the property of , her husband . Some years ago he had taken John , when he was a boy , to act with him as his foreman or assistant , and the arrangement had been continued till the quarrel had sprung up . Peter had more than once declared his

purpose of leaving all that he possessed to the young man , and John had never doubted his word . But , in return for all this future wealth , it was expected , not only that the lad should be his slave , but that the lad , grown into a man , should remain so as long as Peter might live . As Peter was likely to live for the next twenty years , and as the slavery was hard to bear , John had quarrelled with his kinsman , and had gone away to the diggings . Nowit seemedthe quarrel had been arrangedand John wag to come

, , , back to Warriwa . That some one was needed to ride round among the four or five shepherds , —some one beyond Peter himself , —some one to overlook the shearing , some one to attend to the young lambs , some one to see that the water-holes did not run dry ,, had become manifest even to Kate herself . It had leaked out from Peter's dry mouth that some one must come , ancl now she was told that'John Carmichael would return to his old home .

Though she hated her husband , Kate knew what was due to him . Hating him as she had learned to do , hating him as she acknowledged to herself that she did , still she had endeavoured to do her duty by him . She coulci not smile upon him , she could not even speak to him with a kind voice ; but she coulcl make his bed , and iron his shirts , and cook his dinner , ancl see that the things confided to her charge were not destroyed by the old woman or the idiot boy . Perhaps he got from her all he wanted to get . He

did not complain that her voice was not loving . He was harsh , odious in his ways with her , sometimes almost violent ; but it may be doubted whether he would have been less so had she attempted to turn him by any show of false affection . She had learned to feel that if she served him she did for him all that he required , and that duty demanded no more . But now ! would not duty demand more from her now ? . Since she had been brought home to Warriwashe had iven herself freelto

, g up y her thoughts , telling herself boldly that she hated her husband , and that she loved that other man . She told herself , also , that there was no breach of dut y in this . She would never again see that other man . He had crossed her path and had gone . There was nothing for her left in the world , except her husband Peter and Warriwa . As for her

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