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  • The Masonic Magazine
  • Oct. 1, 1878
  • Page 21
  • MILDRED: AN AUTUMN ROMANCE.
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The Masonic Magazine, Oct. 1, 1878: Page 21

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Mildred: An Autumn Romance.

MILDRED : AN AUTUMN ROMANCE .

BY BRO . EMRA HOLMES , Author of " Tales , Poems , and Masonic Papers ; " " The Path of Life : An Allegory ;" "Amabel Vaughan ; " " Notes on the United Order of the Temple and Hvsj . ital , " etc ., etc . CHAPTER II .

ABBEI BUILDETGS . —AtlLDRED ' s STORX . THST facing the Avestern entrance of the church stand the Abbey Buildings on ono ^ side , within their own pretty grounds , and nearer the Abbey gateway the pleasant Elizabethan vicarage , ivy covered , ancl with many gables ; on the other side , at right angles , the High-street ; at the farther corner of the great quadrangle , of ivhich the

Abbey walls form two sides , and the church the centre , stand the almshouses and national schools , aud further on some gentlemen ' s houses abutting on the road . At No . 1 , Abbey Buildings , lived the Misses Bethune , two old ladies , of antique manners and primitive notions , with their orphan niece and ward—Mildred Bethune . Mildred ' s father had been an artist and a genius , blessed with a generous nature , coupled with ignorance of the world and its ways ; and totally unfitted to cope with the ivickedness

that is therein . He had married early in life a Miss Copley , a lady of independent income ( some _ £ 300 a year ) , and Avhich had been Avisely settled on herself ancl her offspring . George Bethune was a man of old family , poor , proud , ancl clever . Miss Copley had met him rather more than halfway , or he would certainly never have married her , for he scorned to be thought a fortune-hunter , and three hundred a year was a little

fortune in St . Benot ' s thirty years ago . At first they had , after their marriage , removed to London , where great things were expected , and George hoped to make himself a name . He had done Avell at the Royal Academy as a student , had Avon the silver medal for " Still Life , " and had got a commission to paint the portrait of the son of the then Lord Mayor . But somehow things did not prosper ivith him . He had an artist ' s idea of beauty , elegance , ancl refinement , and . ivas always building castles in the air . When he .. old a picture for . £ 25 , he ' would go and spend £ ' 50 on the strength of it .

This could not last long , and thc end of it was , ho failed , left London with his wife and only child Mildred , and came back to live at St . Benet ' s on his wife's little fortuneof which he put by £ 50 a year to pay off some preliminary debts , and which he ivas too honourable to disavow , though his bankruptcy had set him free from them . Mrs . Bethune died , and soon after her husband , ivho had mourned her loss sincerely ; and Mildred Avas left to the care of his two maiden sisters , nieces of the late Vicar of

St . Benet ' s . Mr .. Bethune during the last ten or fifteen years of his life had given up ambition , and settled down as a drawing master , teaching the upper ten of the St .. Benet ' s world , and occasionally going over to give lessons at Peterborough ancl Ely . Thus it had come to pass that Mildred ancl Marmaduke first met ; for the General , finding his youngest son had a strong penchant for drawing , engaged Mr . Bethune to teach him ; and as it ivas sometimes inconvenient when the house was full of guests , or at election times , to have Mr . Bethune there , Marmaduke , then seventeen , ancl preparing for Sandhurst , us id to go over to the Great Whyto where the artist lived , and get his lesson with Mildred ,

“The Masonic Magazine: 1878-10-01, Page 21” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 3 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01101878/page/21/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
Monthly Masonic Summary. Article 1
CHARTER OF SCOON AND PERTH LODGE, A.D. 1658. Article 2
THE SO-CALLED LOCKE MS. Article 4
AN OPENING ODE. Article 7
MASONRY AND CHRISTIANITY. Article 8
A SONG FOR SUMMER. Article 9
FIVE POINTS OF FELLOWSHIP. Article 10
BEATRICE. Article 11
ART-JOTTINGS IN ART-STUDIOS.* Article 14
LEND A HELPING HAND. Article 16
AUTUMN LEAFLETS. Article 17
AN IMPROMPTU. Article 19
LORELEI. Article 19
MILDRED: AN AUTUMN ROMANCE. Article 21
A VISIT TO ASHOVER CHURCHYARD. Article 25
LOST AND SAVED; OR, NELLIE POWERS, THE MISSIONARY'S DAUGHTER. Article 28
REVIEW. Article 32
SONNET. Article 34
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART. Article 35
THE MODERN ORDER OF "KNIGHTS TEMPLAR" IN THE BRITISH DOMINIONS. Article 38
THE ORIGIN AND REFERENCES OF THE HERMESIAN SPURIOUS FREEMASONRY. Article 46
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Mildred: An Autumn Romance.

MILDRED : AN AUTUMN ROMANCE .

BY BRO . EMRA HOLMES , Author of " Tales , Poems , and Masonic Papers ; " " The Path of Life : An Allegory ;" "Amabel Vaughan ; " " Notes on the United Order of the Temple and Hvsj . ital , " etc ., etc . CHAPTER II .

ABBEI BUILDETGS . —AtlLDRED ' s STORX . THST facing the Avestern entrance of the church stand the Abbey Buildings on ono ^ side , within their own pretty grounds , and nearer the Abbey gateway the pleasant Elizabethan vicarage , ivy covered , ancl with many gables ; on the other side , at right angles , the High-street ; at the farther corner of the great quadrangle , of ivhich the

Abbey walls form two sides , and the church the centre , stand the almshouses and national schools , aud further on some gentlemen ' s houses abutting on the road . At No . 1 , Abbey Buildings , lived the Misses Bethune , two old ladies , of antique manners and primitive notions , with their orphan niece and ward—Mildred Bethune . Mildred ' s father had been an artist and a genius , blessed with a generous nature , coupled with ignorance of the world and its ways ; and totally unfitted to cope with the ivickedness

that is therein . He had married early in life a Miss Copley , a lady of independent income ( some _ £ 300 a year ) , and Avhich had been Avisely settled on herself ancl her offspring . George Bethune was a man of old family , poor , proud , ancl clever . Miss Copley had met him rather more than halfway , or he would certainly never have married her , for he scorned to be thought a fortune-hunter , and three hundred a year was a little

fortune in St . Benot ' s thirty years ago . At first they had , after their marriage , removed to London , where great things were expected , and George hoped to make himself a name . He had done Avell at the Royal Academy as a student , had Avon the silver medal for " Still Life , " and had got a commission to paint the portrait of the son of the then Lord Mayor . But somehow things did not prosper ivith him . He had an artist ' s idea of beauty , elegance , ancl refinement , and . ivas always building castles in the air . When he .. old a picture for . £ 25 , he ' would go and spend £ ' 50 on the strength of it .

This could not last long , and thc end of it was , ho failed , left London with his wife and only child Mildred , and came back to live at St . Benet ' s on his wife's little fortuneof which he put by £ 50 a year to pay off some preliminary debts , and which he ivas too honourable to disavow , though his bankruptcy had set him free from them . Mrs . Bethune died , and soon after her husband , ivho had mourned her loss sincerely ; and Mildred Avas left to the care of his two maiden sisters , nieces of the late Vicar of

St . Benet ' s . Mr .. Bethune during the last ten or fifteen years of his life had given up ambition , and settled down as a drawing master , teaching the upper ten of the St .. Benet ' s world , and occasionally going over to give lessons at Peterborough ancl Ely . Thus it had come to pass that Mildred ancl Marmaduke first met ; for the General , finding his youngest son had a strong penchant for drawing , engaged Mr . Bethune to teach him ; and as it ivas sometimes inconvenient when the house was full of guests , or at election times , to have Mr . Bethune there , Marmaduke , then seventeen , ancl preparing for Sandhurst , us id to go over to the Great Whyto where the artist lived , and get his lesson with Mildred ,

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