Skip to main content
Museum of Freemasonry

Masonic Periodicals Online

  • Explore
  • Advanced Search
  • Home
  • Explore
  • The Masonic Illustrated
  • Dec. 1, 1903
  • Page 26
  • A Shakespearian heroine.
Current:

The Masonic Illustrated, Dec. 1, 1903: Page 26

  • Back to The Masonic Illustrated, Dec. 1, 1903
  • Print image
  • Articles/Ads
    Article A Shakespearian heroine. Page 1 of 5 →
Page 26

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

A Shakespearian Heroine.

A Shakespearian heroine .

IT was at Lady Pechell ' s Shakespeare Readings that I iirst met the Hartley Brownes . Mr . Hartley Browne was a Shakespearian enthusiast , and was greatly respected and admired by a number of ladies for what they called his delightful Shakespeare talks . After the Readings were over , he would sitsurrounded by worshipperslecturing on the

, , plays ; but although it is true that before he bought Pig ' s Cross ( which he immediately rechristened Belmont ) and settled in the neighbourhood , I had been looked upon as the principal local exponent oi belles hit res ; yet I bore no grudge towards Hartley Browne .

Mrs . Browne was still a pretty woman , with delicate features , and a very discontented droop to the corners of her thin lips . She was , I knew , much envied by many of the lady readers for her happy position as wife to the delightful and learned Hartley , and I always thought she appreciated

her good fortune , till it chanced one evening that I arrived late , and the room being unusually full I had to stand outside the door . I heard Hartley ' s voice droning away in the distance . While I thus stood , Mrs . Browne arrived .

" Who ' s speaking ? " she whispered . " Mr . Hartley Browne , " I answered . " Oh ! " And she turned away . Never shall I forget the contemptuous indifference of that oh .

" How pretty Mrs . Browne looks to-night , said a lady on the other side of me . " Lucky woman ! How proud she must be of such a husband ! What would I not give if my old man could talk like that ! " I glanced at the portly , unromantic Huggins , where he slumbered peacefully on a sofa . No , Huggins could not talk

like that ; but then Mrs . Huggins would never have said " oh ! " like Mrs . Browne . Happy Huggins ! Happy Mrs . Huggins !—if only she had known it . But , woman-like , she left the virtuous Huggins to his dreams , and crushed forward to hear Hartley Browne ' s

erudition . Now Hartley Browne did not seem unamiable ; he certainly had attractions for the female sex . What could cause Mrs . Browne to harbour such unwifely feelings towards her lord ? She gained a new interest in my eyes when she

became thus wrapt in a halo of mystery , and I devoted the rest of the evening to penetrating it . I think she suspected my purpose ; at all events I failed miserably . Just as I was abandoning the enterprise as hopeless , Hartley Browne joined us . " Where ' s Portia ? " he asked at once . Portia was his

daughter . " She didn't come , " said Mrs . Browne . " But she said she would ! " said Hartley . " I know ; but last time she had a cold and came out she was laid up for a fortnight ; so I really couldn't risk it again , " said Mrs . Browne . And under the meek tones I heard the

vibration of a war-cry . Foolishly , considering the purpose I had in hand , but pushed by that nervous terror of a scene that paralyses the social and domestic power of even the best men , I sought to turn the conversation .

" You have named your daughter after the most charming of Shakespeare ' s heroines , " I said . " Yes , " he answered , and his face lit tip with affection at the thought of his daughter . " I wanted her to resemble the real Portia , and so I christened her that . I doubt if she has

ail the qualities necessary for a Portia , but I should like her to be a heroine . Heroines have various qualities . " " Yes , of course ; Grace Darling " ... I began politely . For Portia Browne is no genius ; but she has good strong arms , and might emulate the more athletic heroines . " Grace Darling ! " exclaimed Hartley , his eye blazing

with contempt as it fell on me . " Darling Grace ! " And he gave a rude little laugh , meant , I think , to sting that heroine , who luckily could not hear , for having really lived . " I don't want her to be that sort of heroine . One of Shakespeare ' s heroines , of course I mean . That is the fate I dream of for my child . One of those grand , beautiful , statuesque

characters , so joyous , yet so wise , so ... " " There ' s Juliet , a dagger ; Desdemona , a pillow ; Cordelia , the rope ; Ophelia , the river—Which is the fate you prefer for poor Hiss Browne ? " Hartley ' s face clouded . It was that dreadful vulgar

Huggins who had intruded into the conversation . " I do not mean the heroines of the tragedies , " said Browne angrily . " There shall be no tragedies in my family . There can be no tragedies in my family ! It has been well said that tragedies do not happen to the wise man . They

are the result of want of wisdom , or want of self-control ; not knowing what is right , or not doing what is right . If King Lear had been a sensible man , that play might have been a comedy , but never the tragedy we know . If even Cordelia had shown a little tact , much misery would have been averted . If Othello had been as good a judge of

character as the average child , he would never have believed in Iago , nor suffocated his wife . Ophelia went mad and drowned herself because she could neither control her own emotions nor understand how to manage Hamlet . All these tragedies arise from the absence of wisdom and self-control

in the heroes and heroines , and that is why I do not want my Portia to be like the tragedy heroines . Not because I fear for her , the river or the rope " —and he turned on the affrighted Huggins with a sudden vehemence that shook even my firmness , " but because I would not see her have the flaws of character that lead to violent ends . "

There was something almost Roman in the dignity of these sentiments , and I thought they made Huggins ' s bulky features look commoner than usual by sheer force of contrast . Feeling in my breast a rising mist of that admiration for Browne which I so much disliked in my neighbours , I stilled it at once , and only remarked :

"You would have her resemble one of the comedy heroines ? " " Exactly , " he replied . " That is my wish . " " The chief thing the comedy heroines do , " said the irrepressible Huggins , " is to go about in masculine attire .

Rosalind , Viola , Imogen , Portia—perhaps Miss Browne may be here to-night disguised in a dress suit ! " Brown got exceedingly angry . " Remember you are speaking of my daughter , sir ! " he exclaimed .

" The room is quite empty , " said Mrs . Browne , in her thin , discontented voice . " Don't you think we ought to go ?" " I hope Miss Browne's cold is nothing serious , " I said as we parted . " A Shakespearian heroine should not have such a prosaic malady as a cold ! "

" Beatrice has a cold in ' Much Ado about Nothing , '" said Hartley , in a tone of displeasure , " but Beatrice was not obliged to stay at home in consequence . Beatrice had freedom from petty trammels ; Beatrice ... " " You may as well put it completely into words" said

, Mrs . Browne , with frigid rage . " Beatrice ' s mother was happily dead . " I felt a sudden chill . I had entered into the presence of the skeleton . I was glad Huggins had gone . Hartley Browne looked filled with compunction . He

tried to take his wife ' s hand , which she withdrew . " No , my clear , you always misunderstand , " he said hurriedly . " I never said or thought that . What I do say , and what anyone can see for oneself , is that all Shakespeare ' s heroines , without , I think , any exceptions but two , have no

“The Masonic Illustrated: 1903-12-01, Page 26” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 24 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mil/issues/mil_01121903/page/26/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
The Province of Oxfordshire. Article 2
Truro Cathedral. Article 5
Two Imperial Craftsmen. Article 7
Untitled Article 8
Untitled Article 9
Presentation to Bro. Frederick C. Van Duzer. Article 10
Untitled Ad 10
Untitled Ad 10
Consecration of the Ulster Lodge, No. 2972. Article 11
Consecration of the Connaught Lodge, No. 2981. Article 12
"Corinthian'' Hall, Kobe. Article 13
King Edward VII. Preceptory, No. 173. Article 15
Masonic Presentation at South Shields. Article 15
Untitled Ad 15
Untitled Ad 16
Untitled Ad 16
Untitled Ad 16
Untitled Ad 16
Freemasonry in 1903. Article 16
At the Sign of the Perfect Ashlar. Article 17
Quarterly Communication of Grand Lodge. Article 20
Untitled Ad 20
Untitled Ad 20
Whittington Lodge, No. 862. Article 21
Bro. John Jaylor, J.P. Article 21
Twelfth Annual Festival of the Kirby Lodge of Instruction , No. 263. Article 22
Untitled Ad 22
Untitled Ad 22
Commercial Travellers' Lod ge, No . 2795. Article 23
Untitled Ad 23
Untitled Ad 23
Founders of the Borough of Bethnal Green Lodge, No. 2896. Article 24
"Where Masons do Congregate." Article 25
A Shakespearian heroine. Article 26
Untitled Ad 27
Untitled Ad 27
Untitled Ad 27
Untitled Ad 27
Untitled Ad 28
Untitled Ad 28
Untitled Ad 28
Untitled Ad 28
Untitled Ad 28
Untitled Ad 29
Untitled Ad 29
Untitled Ad 32
Page 1

Page 1

1 Article
Page 2

Page 2

1 Article
Page 3

Page 3

1 Article
Page 4

Page 4

1 Article
Page 5

Page 5

1 Article
Page 6

Page 6

1 Article
Page 7

Page 7

1 Article
Page 8

Page 8

1 Article
Page 9

Page 9

1 Article
Page 10

Page 10

3 Articles
Page 11

Page 11

1 Article
Page 12

Page 12

2 Articles
Page 13

Page 13

2 Articles
Page 14

Page 14

1 Article
Page 15

Page 15

3 Articles
Page 16

Page 16

5 Articles
Page 17

Page 17

1 Article
Page 18

Page 18

1 Article
Page 19

Page 19

1 Article
Page 20

Page 20

3 Articles
Page 21

Page 21

3 Articles
Page 22

Page 22

3 Articles
Page 23

Page 23

3 Articles
Page 24

Page 24

1 Article
Page 25

Page 25

1 Article
Page 26

Page 26

1 Article
Page 27

Page 27

4 Articles
Page 28

Page 28

5 Articles
Page 29

Page 29

3 Articles
Page 30

Page 30

1 Article
Page 31

Page 31

1 Article
Page 32

Page 32

2 Articles
Page 26

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

A Shakespearian Heroine.

A Shakespearian heroine .

IT was at Lady Pechell ' s Shakespeare Readings that I iirst met the Hartley Brownes . Mr . Hartley Browne was a Shakespearian enthusiast , and was greatly respected and admired by a number of ladies for what they called his delightful Shakespeare talks . After the Readings were over , he would sitsurrounded by worshipperslecturing on the

, , plays ; but although it is true that before he bought Pig ' s Cross ( which he immediately rechristened Belmont ) and settled in the neighbourhood , I had been looked upon as the principal local exponent oi belles hit res ; yet I bore no grudge towards Hartley Browne .

Mrs . Browne was still a pretty woman , with delicate features , and a very discontented droop to the corners of her thin lips . She was , I knew , much envied by many of the lady readers for her happy position as wife to the delightful and learned Hartley , and I always thought she appreciated

her good fortune , till it chanced one evening that I arrived late , and the room being unusually full I had to stand outside the door . I heard Hartley ' s voice droning away in the distance . While I thus stood , Mrs . Browne arrived .

" Who ' s speaking ? " she whispered . " Mr . Hartley Browne , " I answered . " Oh ! " And she turned away . Never shall I forget the contemptuous indifference of that oh .

" How pretty Mrs . Browne looks to-night , said a lady on the other side of me . " Lucky woman ! How proud she must be of such a husband ! What would I not give if my old man could talk like that ! " I glanced at the portly , unromantic Huggins , where he slumbered peacefully on a sofa . No , Huggins could not talk

like that ; but then Mrs . Huggins would never have said " oh ! " like Mrs . Browne . Happy Huggins ! Happy Mrs . Huggins !—if only she had known it . But , woman-like , she left the virtuous Huggins to his dreams , and crushed forward to hear Hartley Browne ' s

erudition . Now Hartley Browne did not seem unamiable ; he certainly had attractions for the female sex . What could cause Mrs . Browne to harbour such unwifely feelings towards her lord ? She gained a new interest in my eyes when she

became thus wrapt in a halo of mystery , and I devoted the rest of the evening to penetrating it . I think she suspected my purpose ; at all events I failed miserably . Just as I was abandoning the enterprise as hopeless , Hartley Browne joined us . " Where ' s Portia ? " he asked at once . Portia was his

daughter . " She didn't come , " said Mrs . Browne . " But she said she would ! " said Hartley . " I know ; but last time she had a cold and came out she was laid up for a fortnight ; so I really couldn't risk it again , " said Mrs . Browne . And under the meek tones I heard the

vibration of a war-cry . Foolishly , considering the purpose I had in hand , but pushed by that nervous terror of a scene that paralyses the social and domestic power of even the best men , I sought to turn the conversation .

" You have named your daughter after the most charming of Shakespeare ' s heroines , " I said . " Yes , " he answered , and his face lit tip with affection at the thought of his daughter . " I wanted her to resemble the real Portia , and so I christened her that . I doubt if she has

ail the qualities necessary for a Portia , but I should like her to be a heroine . Heroines have various qualities . " " Yes , of course ; Grace Darling " ... I began politely . For Portia Browne is no genius ; but she has good strong arms , and might emulate the more athletic heroines . " Grace Darling ! " exclaimed Hartley , his eye blazing

with contempt as it fell on me . " Darling Grace ! " And he gave a rude little laugh , meant , I think , to sting that heroine , who luckily could not hear , for having really lived . " I don't want her to be that sort of heroine . One of Shakespeare ' s heroines , of course I mean . That is the fate I dream of for my child . One of those grand , beautiful , statuesque

characters , so joyous , yet so wise , so ... " " There ' s Juliet , a dagger ; Desdemona , a pillow ; Cordelia , the rope ; Ophelia , the river—Which is the fate you prefer for poor Hiss Browne ? " Hartley ' s face clouded . It was that dreadful vulgar

Huggins who had intruded into the conversation . " I do not mean the heroines of the tragedies , " said Browne angrily . " There shall be no tragedies in my family . There can be no tragedies in my family ! It has been well said that tragedies do not happen to the wise man . They

are the result of want of wisdom , or want of self-control ; not knowing what is right , or not doing what is right . If King Lear had been a sensible man , that play might have been a comedy , but never the tragedy we know . If even Cordelia had shown a little tact , much misery would have been averted . If Othello had been as good a judge of

character as the average child , he would never have believed in Iago , nor suffocated his wife . Ophelia went mad and drowned herself because she could neither control her own emotions nor understand how to manage Hamlet . All these tragedies arise from the absence of wisdom and self-control

in the heroes and heroines , and that is why I do not want my Portia to be like the tragedy heroines . Not because I fear for her , the river or the rope " —and he turned on the affrighted Huggins with a sudden vehemence that shook even my firmness , " but because I would not see her have the flaws of character that lead to violent ends . "

There was something almost Roman in the dignity of these sentiments , and I thought they made Huggins ' s bulky features look commoner than usual by sheer force of contrast . Feeling in my breast a rising mist of that admiration for Browne which I so much disliked in my neighbours , I stilled it at once , and only remarked :

"You would have her resemble one of the comedy heroines ? " " Exactly , " he replied . " That is my wish . " " The chief thing the comedy heroines do , " said the irrepressible Huggins , " is to go about in masculine attire .

Rosalind , Viola , Imogen , Portia—perhaps Miss Browne may be here to-night disguised in a dress suit ! " Brown got exceedingly angry . " Remember you are speaking of my daughter , sir ! " he exclaimed .

" The room is quite empty , " said Mrs . Browne , in her thin , discontented voice . " Don't you think we ought to go ?" " I hope Miss Browne's cold is nothing serious , " I said as we parted . " A Shakespearian heroine should not have such a prosaic malady as a cold ! "

" Beatrice has a cold in ' Much Ado about Nothing , '" said Hartley , in a tone of displeasure , " but Beatrice was not obliged to stay at home in consequence . Beatrice had freedom from petty trammels ; Beatrice ... " " You may as well put it completely into words" said

, Mrs . Browne , with frigid rage . " Beatrice ' s mother was happily dead . " I felt a sudden chill . I had entered into the presence of the skeleton . I was glad Huggins had gone . Hartley Browne looked filled with compunction . He

tried to take his wife ' s hand , which she withdrew . " No , my clear , you always misunderstand , " he said hurriedly . " I never said or thought that . What I do say , and what anyone can see for oneself , is that all Shakespeare ' s heroines , without , I think , any exceptions but two , have no

  • Prev page
  • 1
  • 25
  • You're on page26
  • 27
  • 32
  • Next page
  • Accredited Museum Designated Outstanding Collection
  • LIBRARY AND MUSEUM CHARITABLE TRUST OF THE UNITED GRAND LODGE OF ENGLAND REGISTERED CHARITY NUMBER 1058497 / ALL RIGHTS RESERVED © 2025

  • Accessibility statement

  • Designed, developed, and maintained by King's Digital Lab

We use cookies to track usage and preferences.

Privacy & cookie policy