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  • The Masonic Mirror
  • Jan. 1, 1855
  • Page 16
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The Masonic Mirror, Jan. 1, 1855: Page 16

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    Article THE HEIR OF BENDERSLEIGH; OR, THE FREEMASON'S PROMISE. ← Page 6 of 9 →
Page 16

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The Heir Of Bendersleigh; Or, The Freemason's Promise.

Joe . " This request was addressed to a person who was behind him , and wiio immediately afterwards made his appearance in Mr . Grainger ' s office , by the side of Mr . Raker . This individual might very reasonably have been taken for either an omnibus cad—a sporting nobleman—a prize fighter , or a blackleg . He had anything but an attractive countenance , in which

, moreover , there was a permanent expression of impudent confidence and self possession , and about whose general bearing- there was an offensive swagger , which , as far as outward appearances were concerned , consisted almost exclusively of a loose drab great coat , with buttons upon it as large asdessert plates . Below this article of his dress was just * perceptible ° a pair of trowsersthe pattern of which was enormousllarge in keeping

, y with the great coat , which covered them . " Sit down , Joe , " said Mr . Raker , with the air of one who was perfectly at home . Joe needed no second invitation , so down he sat , and having done so , stared at Rachel until she was quite confused , and then he whistled at his trinmnh .

" How are you ? Grainger ? " exclaimed Mr . Raker , in gleeful tone . "Good morning , Mr . Raker ; " replied Mr . Grainger . "Hallo ! " exclaimed Mr . Raker , " what brings you here , Rachel ?" "Oh , Mr . Raker , I was in town , and-1 merely " made so bold as to call upon Mr . Grainger , " said Rachel , rising , and exhibiting considerable embarrassment . " To think that he should have come iu at this

moment , " thought Rachel to herself , "I could scratch his face , but my sex withholds me . " Although this was secret it was very novel reasoning , inasmuch as scratching and the sex are not uncommonl y associated . " Well , Rachel , " cried Mr . Raker , in a bantering tone , " lots of fun and bustle to-morrow , eh , over the water . " "Ah ! " sighed Rachel .

" Why , you seem in the dumps , Rachel ; now I'll be bound I can tell the reason . I suppose you'd rather see your friend Mr . Henry Elliotson walk off with Harriet ! I ' ve got the prize though ! " and he laughed coaxingly in Rachel ' s face , and turned and winked upon his friend Joe , who went through a similar performance , ejaculating in a subdued tone , the word " prime , " thereby intimating that he was amused amazingly by the scene before him .

' _ ' Come , now , Rachel , confess you'd rather see Harriet married to this Elliotson ; " and he glanced over to Mr . Grainger . " Comparisons is impious , " replied Rachel , promptly . " So they is ; " said Joe , mimicking Rachel ' s tone and maimer . "No sneers , Joe ; " cried Mr . Raker , in high glee . " He is ' such a chap for sneering , Rachel , " continued he , turning to Rachel .

" Gammon , " cried Mr . Joe , in a subdued tone , as before . " Though I am but a poor servant , Mr . Raker , I have my feelings if other people has none , " said she , fiercely ; " I have my feelings , and so I'll take my leave . Good morning , Sir ; " and she hastily quitted the office . "Ha , ha , ha , " laughed Mr . Raker , "there ' s a joke , Joe . " "Prime , " replied Joe , who appeared actuated on that occasion with

“The Masonic Mirror: 1855-01-01, Page 16” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 1 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mir/issues/mmg_01011855/page/16/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
THE MASONIC MIRROR: Article 1
PROSPERITY OF FREEMASONRY. Article 3
THE SQUARE AND COMPASSES. Article 3
FREEMASONRY IN ENGLAND. Article 4
BROTHERLY LOVE. Article 8
THE HEIR OF BENDERSLEIGH; OR, THE FREEMASON'S PROMISE. Article 11
MASONIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 19
Untitled Article 22
Untitled Article 23
SCOTLAND. Article 39
CORRRESPONDENCE. Article 40
Untitled Article 41
FREEMASONRY IN BANFFSHIRE. Article 42
LODGES OF INSTRUCTION. Article 42
Untitled Article 43
SUMMARY OF NEWS FOR DECEMBER. Article 43
OBITUARY. Article 47
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 47
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

The Heir Of Bendersleigh; Or, The Freemason's Promise.

Joe . " This request was addressed to a person who was behind him , and wiio immediately afterwards made his appearance in Mr . Grainger ' s office , by the side of Mr . Raker . This individual might very reasonably have been taken for either an omnibus cad—a sporting nobleman—a prize fighter , or a blackleg . He had anything but an attractive countenance , in which

, moreover , there was a permanent expression of impudent confidence and self possession , and about whose general bearing- there was an offensive swagger , which , as far as outward appearances were concerned , consisted almost exclusively of a loose drab great coat , with buttons upon it as large asdessert plates . Below this article of his dress was just * perceptible ° a pair of trowsersthe pattern of which was enormousllarge in keeping

, y with the great coat , which covered them . " Sit down , Joe , " said Mr . Raker , with the air of one who was perfectly at home . Joe needed no second invitation , so down he sat , and having done so , stared at Rachel until she was quite confused , and then he whistled at his trinmnh .

" How are you ? Grainger ? " exclaimed Mr . Raker , in gleeful tone . "Good morning , Mr . Raker ; " replied Mr . Grainger . "Hallo ! " exclaimed Mr . Raker , " what brings you here , Rachel ?" "Oh , Mr . Raker , I was in town , and-1 merely " made so bold as to call upon Mr . Grainger , " said Rachel , rising , and exhibiting considerable embarrassment . " To think that he should have come iu at this

moment , " thought Rachel to herself , "I could scratch his face , but my sex withholds me . " Although this was secret it was very novel reasoning , inasmuch as scratching and the sex are not uncommonl y associated . " Well , Rachel , " cried Mr . Raker , in a bantering tone , " lots of fun and bustle to-morrow , eh , over the water . " "Ah ! " sighed Rachel .

" Why , you seem in the dumps , Rachel ; now I'll be bound I can tell the reason . I suppose you'd rather see your friend Mr . Henry Elliotson walk off with Harriet ! I ' ve got the prize though ! " and he laughed coaxingly in Rachel ' s face , and turned and winked upon his friend Joe , who went through a similar performance , ejaculating in a subdued tone , the word " prime , " thereby intimating that he was amused amazingly by the scene before him .

' _ ' Come , now , Rachel , confess you'd rather see Harriet married to this Elliotson ; " and he glanced over to Mr . Grainger . " Comparisons is impious , " replied Rachel , promptly . " So they is ; " said Joe , mimicking Rachel ' s tone and maimer . "No sneers , Joe ; " cried Mr . Raker , in high glee . " He is ' such a chap for sneering , Rachel , " continued he , turning to Rachel .

" Gammon , " cried Mr . Joe , in a subdued tone , as before . " Though I am but a poor servant , Mr . Raker , I have my feelings if other people has none , " said she , fiercely ; " I have my feelings , and so I'll take my leave . Good morning , Sir ; " and she hastily quitted the office . "Ha , ha , ha , " laughed Mr . Raker , "there ' s a joke , Joe . " "Prime , " replied Joe , who appeared actuated on that occasion with

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