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  • May 1, 1874
  • Page 12
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The Masonic Magazine, May 1, 1874: Page 12

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    Article A COOL PROPOSAL. Page 1 of 3 →
Page 12

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

A Cool Proposal.

A COOL PROPOSAL .

A young friend of mine is , as they say , in a " very bad way , " anel came to me the other mommy with a rueful face , and an agitated maun or . Though I might make some little allowance for the nervous " abord " of our youth

today , their shaky hands , and their husky voices , on account of a preposterous allowance of Cigarettes or Cavendish , or to a too normal indulgence in " corpse revivers , " and"B . and S . ; " yet , I saw that something above the wont had

fluttered and flustered the not generally ungenial Anthony . So I said iu a patriarchal manner , and a suave voice , " Anthony my son , what ails you ?" 'Is it cold salmon , or curried lobster ? or are you in ' Queer Street , ' or , worst

of all are you in Jove ? " The gentle Anthony blushed , a fact I am glad to record , for it is not often that our youth can or do blush . Infatuated youth , at last I said , are you treacling on that dangerous groundwhere as some one

, said of old , is to be found , alike a " brovis insania , " " et luctus et olor , " or as another ancient writer , well puts it , " Tti levis es , et multoque tnis ventosior alls . "

Mentor , he replied , " I is / " I confess that I was much overpowered by the announcement , but having refreshed the inward man , by a good luncheon , at which I observed that Anthony ' s "fervens amor" had not taken away

Anthony ' s appetite , I asked him incontinently , who the fair being was . " Euphrosyne Brown , " he replied , with a sigh , and then immediately added , " the most charming girl I have ever seen , or ever danced with . " " "Where did

you meet her ? Anthony , " I . asked , thinking that my young friend from the extreme volubility of his utterance , and the existability of his manner , was- a "little off the nut , " and I was wishful to soothe and trauquilize his perturbed spirits . "I

met her the other night at Mrs . Gator ' s ball , was introduced to her by Tom Jones—you know Tom—and fell madly in love with her . " That ' s the modern .

| phrase , it appears , the striking utterance which our young men use , though in nine eases out of ten it means not with her , but with her money— £ . s . d . " Who is she ? " I again asked , struck with the young man ' s determined and

emphatic asseverations . " Well I don't know much about her belongings , " said Anthony , "except that she has a brother iu a Lancer regiment , one sister married , another with her governessand a rather queer old gal of a

, mother , or ' mater' as she called her . I believe she has lots of tin , and so I have made up my mind to propose to her !"

I stared at him aghast . ' "Afteronly—seeing—her—once , " I replied hesitatingly and in monosyllables . "Ob dear no , " he said , "I have met her twice since then , and we ' ve got on capitally . Though I do wish she would not be so

civil to a young fellow in a blonde moustache , who was talking to her the other night , something about a battery , and lord Napier , and the Abyssinian War . I suspect that he is a gunner . " " But Anthony , " I resumed in an

expostulatory tone , " what do you know of her ? how can you think of proposing to a person you ' ve only seen three or four times ? What can either of you really understand of each others sentiments and sympathies so as to render it likely that your journey through life ( which , remember , will have to be henceforth slow and

commonplace , as a luggage train" with no more ' expresses ' or ' specials , ' my boy for you , ) a happy and a peaceful progress ?" "Oh , " he said with the happy indifference of youth , " we do agree about the

'Boat Bace , ' and 'Hunting , ' and 'Dancing , ' and 'Drags ; ' in fiict everything . " " Well , all these are most important , " I said , " but how about temper and tastes , and home life , and the humdrum affairs which make up oar common

existence . " Oil , he said , "you know , I don't think all that matters much . People marry because they like a ' party , ' or

“The Masonic Magazine: 1874-05-01, Page 12” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 24 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01051874/page/12/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
Monthly Masonic Summary. Article 1
THE INITIATION OF PRINCE ARTHUR INTO FREEMASONRY. Article 2
THE AREA ROUND ST. PAUL'S. Article 3
THE OLD MASONIC POEM. Article 3
BOOKSTORE PRIORY. Article 5
THE LIFE OF BRO. GEORGE OLIVER, D.D. Article 8
THE NEW MORALITY, 1874. Article 11
A COOL PROPOSAL. Article 12
ROYAL ARCH ADDRESS. Article 14
MODERN MEANINGS TO OLD WORDS. Article 17
ROMAN CATHOLICISM AND FREEMASONRY.—THE CHATHAM OUTRAGE. Article 17
THE MYSTIC TIE. Article 21
PUZZLES. Article 21
Reviews. Article 24
WEARING THE MASONIC EMBLEMS. Article 25
SYMBOL LANGUAGE. Article 26
FREEMASONRY AS A CONSERVATOR OF THE ARTS AND SCIENCES. Article 26
A SPEECH BY MARK TWAIN. Article 29
READING MASONS AT HOME AND ABROAD. Article 30
Our Archaeological Corner. Article 30
Questions and Answers. Article 31
Monthly Odds and Ends. Article 31
TOO GOOD TO BE LOST. Article 32
ADVICE . Article 32
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

A Cool Proposal.

A COOL PROPOSAL .

A young friend of mine is , as they say , in a " very bad way , " anel came to me the other mommy with a rueful face , and an agitated maun or . Though I might make some little allowance for the nervous " abord " of our youth

today , their shaky hands , and their husky voices , on account of a preposterous allowance of Cigarettes or Cavendish , or to a too normal indulgence in " corpse revivers , " and"B . and S . ; " yet , I saw that something above the wont had

fluttered and flustered the not generally ungenial Anthony . So I said iu a patriarchal manner , and a suave voice , " Anthony my son , what ails you ?" 'Is it cold salmon , or curried lobster ? or are you in ' Queer Street , ' or , worst

of all are you in Jove ? " The gentle Anthony blushed , a fact I am glad to record , for it is not often that our youth can or do blush . Infatuated youth , at last I said , are you treacling on that dangerous groundwhere as some one

, said of old , is to be found , alike a " brovis insania , " " et luctus et olor , " or as another ancient writer , well puts it , " Tti levis es , et multoque tnis ventosior alls . "

Mentor , he replied , " I is / " I confess that I was much overpowered by the announcement , but having refreshed the inward man , by a good luncheon , at which I observed that Anthony ' s "fervens amor" had not taken away

Anthony ' s appetite , I asked him incontinently , who the fair being was . " Euphrosyne Brown , " he replied , with a sigh , and then immediately added , " the most charming girl I have ever seen , or ever danced with . " " "Where did

you meet her ? Anthony , " I . asked , thinking that my young friend from the extreme volubility of his utterance , and the existability of his manner , was- a "little off the nut , " and I was wishful to soothe and trauquilize his perturbed spirits . "I

met her the other night at Mrs . Gator ' s ball , was introduced to her by Tom Jones—you know Tom—and fell madly in love with her . " That ' s the modern .

| phrase , it appears , the striking utterance which our young men use , though in nine eases out of ten it means not with her , but with her money— £ . s . d . " Who is she ? " I again asked , struck with the young man ' s determined and

emphatic asseverations . " Well I don't know much about her belongings , " said Anthony , "except that she has a brother iu a Lancer regiment , one sister married , another with her governessand a rather queer old gal of a

, mother , or ' mater' as she called her . I believe she has lots of tin , and so I have made up my mind to propose to her !"

I stared at him aghast . ' "Afteronly—seeing—her—once , " I replied hesitatingly and in monosyllables . "Ob dear no , " he said , "I have met her twice since then , and we ' ve got on capitally . Though I do wish she would not be so

civil to a young fellow in a blonde moustache , who was talking to her the other night , something about a battery , and lord Napier , and the Abyssinian War . I suspect that he is a gunner . " " But Anthony , " I resumed in an

expostulatory tone , " what do you know of her ? how can you think of proposing to a person you ' ve only seen three or four times ? What can either of you really understand of each others sentiments and sympathies so as to render it likely that your journey through life ( which , remember , will have to be henceforth slow and

commonplace , as a luggage train" with no more ' expresses ' or ' specials , ' my boy for you , ) a happy and a peaceful progress ?" "Oh , " he said with the happy indifference of youth , " we do agree about the

'Boat Bace , ' and 'Hunting , ' and 'Dancing , ' and 'Drags ; ' in fiict everything . " " Well , all these are most important , " I said , " but how about temper and tastes , and home life , and the humdrum affairs which make up oar common

existence . " Oil , he said , "you know , I don't think all that matters much . People marry because they like a ' party , ' or

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