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Article LET US ALL BE GIPSIES. ← Page 2 of 2 Article WELL DONE, CONDOR! Page 1 of 3 →
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.
Let Us All Be Gipsies.
To the fields aAvay ! for Nature presses On toiling foreheads a balmy kiss ; There ' s nothing so sweet as her soft caresses , No love more full to the lips than this . God grant , my brothers , when all is over ,
And holiday hours cut short by fate , That the sense of flowers and scent of clover May soften sorroAv and silence hate . Old Time soon measures the fatal sand , And the curtain falls on Bohemia ' s land . New York Dispatch .
Well Done, Condor!
WELL DONE , CONDOR !
A LL our English Masonic readers , and many in all lauds , Avho like - * " * - to hear of deeds of " Derring-Do , " as our Saxon forefathers said , Avill have been deeply moved with the account of the gallantry of our Avell-knoAvn and distinguished Bro . Lord Charles Beresford , and the crew of the gallant little vessel under his command .
The emphatic though brief approval of Admiral Sir Beauchamp Seymour speaks volumes to naval friends , and is the highest encomium possible to zealous Commanders and devoted crews for duty well done . Lord Charles Beresford is IIOAV on shore acting as Chief of Police , and bringing back chaos into order , and ruling kindly and more Anglico ( which foreigners sometimes can't understand or even appreciate ) , over confused nationalities and antagonistic elements of a society rather
rudel y disturbed from its hazy dreams of oriental indolence and oriental quietude . We may feel persuaded that in this new sphere of duty , he Avill do well all he has to do , and that his pluck and geniality will pull him through emergencies and difficulties which would SAvamp a man of ordinary calibre . We may , some of us , like
to think and to feel that Bro . Lord Charles Beresford well represents the true Masonic spirit , ever read y for duty , ever foremost in danger ; but kind , considerate , and tolerant under all circumstances . Some ' one writing to the public press , the other day , says he kneAv Lord Charles at school , and that he Avas the most perfect specimen of pluck'
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.
Let Us All Be Gipsies.
To the fields aAvay ! for Nature presses On toiling foreheads a balmy kiss ; There ' s nothing so sweet as her soft caresses , No love more full to the lips than this . God grant , my brothers , when all is over ,
And holiday hours cut short by fate , That the sense of flowers and scent of clover May soften sorroAv and silence hate . Old Time soon measures the fatal sand , And the curtain falls on Bohemia ' s land . New York Dispatch .
Well Done, Condor!
WELL DONE , CONDOR !
A LL our English Masonic readers , and many in all lauds , Avho like - * " * - to hear of deeds of " Derring-Do , " as our Saxon forefathers said , Avill have been deeply moved with the account of the gallantry of our Avell-knoAvn and distinguished Bro . Lord Charles Beresford , and the crew of the gallant little vessel under his command .
The emphatic though brief approval of Admiral Sir Beauchamp Seymour speaks volumes to naval friends , and is the highest encomium possible to zealous Commanders and devoted crews for duty well done . Lord Charles Beresford is IIOAV on shore acting as Chief of Police , and bringing back chaos into order , and ruling kindly and more Anglico ( which foreigners sometimes can't understand or even appreciate ) , over confused nationalities and antagonistic elements of a society rather
rudel y disturbed from its hazy dreams of oriental indolence and oriental quietude . We may feel persuaded that in this new sphere of duty , he Avill do well all he has to do , and that his pluck and geniality will pull him through emergencies and difficulties which would SAvamp a man of ordinary calibre . We may , some of us , like
to think and to feel that Bro . Lord Charles Beresford well represents the true Masonic spirit , ever read y for duty , ever foremost in danger ; but kind , considerate , and tolerant under all circumstances . Some ' one writing to the public press , the other day , says he kneAv Lord Charles at school , and that he Avas the most perfect specimen of pluck'