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  • March 31, 1851
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The Freemasons' Quarterly Review, March 31, 1851: Page 35

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    Article THE FIRST OFFENCE. ← Page 11 of 13 →
Page 35

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

The First Offence.

with all the vividness of the present , he can hear the sobs of anguish which , though his proud spirit acknowledged not , haunted him for months ; and now , though so many years have past , his hot tears are forcing their way through his fingers , and he sobs in that arbour more bitterly than the child had done before him—ayefar more bitterlyfor

, , her's were tears of sorrow , his are of penitence . At length , with an effort he roused himself ; and , with bowed head , left the garden , after thanking the woman for her civility , and wended his way up the green lane , and across a meadow to the church . He entered the rustic

gate , and , stepping over the neatly kept graves , made his way to one covered with flowers , and , removing his hat , stood before it . " Sacred to the memory of Mabel Wilmot , who departed this life August 5 , 18— , aged eighteen . " Yes—too true , she was gone ; the shock had been too

much for her enfeebled constitution ; she had begged to be brought home to die , and , in the little cottage where she had once been so happy , she breathed her last . She never saw Frederick ; he was too ill to come to her , and she was too weak to be taken to him , or bear the interview , or her heart-broken mother wouldin this extremityhave

con-, , sented to anything . He stood by the grave some few moments—took a small flower from it , which he placed in his bosom , and moved slowly away . At the inn he had a companion waiting for him from whom he was never separated—his tutor , lamed for life by the fearful fall which

Osborne ' s blow had occasioned , whose feet catching in the roots of a tree had alone saved him from a watery grave , and Osborne from the charge of murder . From the moment that , on becoming conscious , he ascertained that the poor man lived , Osborne vowed never to be parted from him—to make the only reparation he was able for the injury

he had wrought him , and secure to him a home for life ; he brought him back to England , nursed him with the tenderest care , and the arm which had injured him , evermore sustained and supported him . He had loved poor Mabel with all the ardour of youth and his ardent natureandanxious as his mother was to

; , see him settled , he could not make up his mind to love another ; but , growing up to womanhood , is a fair , gentle girl , his tutor ' s youngest sister ; and it is said , that since poor Mabel Wilmot died , Frederick has never been seen to

“The Freemasons' Quarterly Review: 1851-03-31, Page 35” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 25 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fqr/issues/fqr_31031851/page/35/.
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Title Category Page
Ip—^S^—^ ^i^fe?^ SHeLF ft ; / : V y:: y ... Article 1
^^^J IN LOVING REMEMBRANCE OF ^fciS Article 2
Untitled Article 3
m A .i P°l Mi — ,' i Article 5
THE FREEMASONS' Article 6
CONTENTS. Article 7
NOTICE TO THE CRAFT: Article 8
CONTENTS. Article 9
CONT E N T S. Article 10
CONTENTS. Article 11
THE CHARITIES. Article 12
THE FREEMASONS' QUARTERLY MAGAZINE AND REVIEW. Article 13
LOVE'S TRIUMPH. Article 24
THE FIRST OFFENCE. Article 25
ON THE TABERNACLE AND TEMPLE Article 37
NOTES UPON FUNERAL SOLEMNITIES. Article 44
THE CONDITION OF SCOTCH MASONRY. Article 49
ON THE RHINE . Article 55
"THINKING" AND "WORKING" FREEMASONS. Article 57
MASONIC PROCESSIONS. Article 59
GEOMETRICAL MASON FLOOR CLOTH. Article 64
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 65
TO THE EDITOR. Article 73
TO THE EDITOR. Article 75
TO THE EDITOR. Article 76
TO THE EDITOR. Article 79
TO THE EDITOR. Article 80
TO THE EDITOR. Article 81
TO THE EDITOR. Article 82
Obituary. Article 83
MASONIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 105
THE 33RD DEGREE FOR ENGLAND AND WALES, AND THE DEPENDENCIES OF THE BRITISH CROWN. Article 108
THE CHARITIES. Article 111
THE 33RD DEGREE FOR ENGLAND AND WALESAND THE DEPENDENCIES OF THE BRITISH CROWN. Article 112
THE CHARITIES. Article 115
ROYAL MASONIC INSTITUTION FOR BOYS. Article 118
METROPOLITAN. Article 120
PROVINCIAL. Article 124
SCOTLAND. Article 137
COLONIAL. Article 148
EAST INDIES. Article 150
WEST INDIES. Article 152
AMERICA. Article 157
SWITZERLAND. Article 158
LITERARY NOTICE. Article 160
NOTICES TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 161
ERRATA IN THE LAST NUMBER. Article 162
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Page 35

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

The First Offence.

with all the vividness of the present , he can hear the sobs of anguish which , though his proud spirit acknowledged not , haunted him for months ; and now , though so many years have past , his hot tears are forcing their way through his fingers , and he sobs in that arbour more bitterly than the child had done before him—ayefar more bitterlyfor

, , her's were tears of sorrow , his are of penitence . At length , with an effort he roused himself ; and , with bowed head , left the garden , after thanking the woman for her civility , and wended his way up the green lane , and across a meadow to the church . He entered the rustic

gate , and , stepping over the neatly kept graves , made his way to one covered with flowers , and , removing his hat , stood before it . " Sacred to the memory of Mabel Wilmot , who departed this life August 5 , 18— , aged eighteen . " Yes—too true , she was gone ; the shock had been too

much for her enfeebled constitution ; she had begged to be brought home to die , and , in the little cottage where she had once been so happy , she breathed her last . She never saw Frederick ; he was too ill to come to her , and she was too weak to be taken to him , or bear the interview , or her heart-broken mother wouldin this extremityhave

con-, , sented to anything . He stood by the grave some few moments—took a small flower from it , which he placed in his bosom , and moved slowly away . At the inn he had a companion waiting for him from whom he was never separated—his tutor , lamed for life by the fearful fall which

Osborne ' s blow had occasioned , whose feet catching in the roots of a tree had alone saved him from a watery grave , and Osborne from the charge of murder . From the moment that , on becoming conscious , he ascertained that the poor man lived , Osborne vowed never to be parted from him—to make the only reparation he was able for the injury

he had wrought him , and secure to him a home for life ; he brought him back to England , nursed him with the tenderest care , and the arm which had injured him , evermore sustained and supported him . He had loved poor Mabel with all the ardour of youth and his ardent natureandanxious as his mother was to

; , see him settled , he could not make up his mind to love another ; but , growing up to womanhood , is a fair , gentle girl , his tutor ' s youngest sister ; and it is said , that since poor Mabel Wilmot died , Frederick has never been seen to

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