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  • May 1, 1874
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  • BOOKSTORE PRIORY.
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The Masonic Magazine, May 1, 1874: Page 5

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Bookstore Priory.

BOOKSTORE PRIORY .

( From Keystone . ) CHAPTER II [ . For Alice AVest the days glided swiftly past during her first three months at Rookstone Priory—so swiftly that when

sunny May dawned , and molted in due time into glorious , leafy June , she could hardly believe that her sojourn had been so long in the quiet old house , of the gloom of - which she never seemed to be conscious . She was now thoroughl

y initiated into the li ght duties expected of her as Mrs . Lorrimore ' s companion , and had learned to love the kind-hearted , motherly , drowsy old lady with all the warmth of her loving gwlisli heart . And Alice AVest was very happy ; she had

never been so happy in her life before . Earnestly did she strive to repay , by a thousand little acts born of ever-watchful care , the manifold kindness which the blind master of Rookstone and his lovable aunt Jem showered upon her so plentifully as the days went by .

Miss AVest ' s first duty of the day was to read prayers . Her last was the same . After breakfast she read a little , worked a little , and talked a little with Mrs . Lorrimorc , who dozed between whiles , and put a few stitches in a ponderous piece of

woolwork raised on an equally ponderous wool-frame , representing " The Passage of the Israelites through the Red Sea , " in which representation the pursued and the pursuers were uncomfortably near to one anotherand the perspective of the whole

, was , to say tho least of it , doubtful . Mrs . Lorriniore had been working at Pharaoh ' s upraised arm on and off for the last two years . ( She often expressed her wonder to Alice if the "Passage through the Red Sea" would ever fulfil its intended

purpose , which was the covering of an immense fat-looking cushion of the softest order for the back of Mrs . Lorrimore ' s own especial arm-chair .

Alice frequently begged to be allowed to assist in the completion of Pharaoh , but aunt Jem would never hear of it . " I began it , my dear , all by myself ; I mean to finish it all myself . I think I shall manage it by-and-by . "

After luncheon till tho first dinner-bell rang , Alice ' s fcinio was her own , to do with it as she vdcased—whether to wander through the deserted garden and shady park , or to revel in tho scrono rruiescence which hovered round the Priory .

Rookstone in the early summer was a very paradise of earthly beauty . Tho gardens were shady , tho flowers beautiful and odorous , tho grass soft , and the trees , which grow and shivered in tho summer breezes near to the housefull of a

whisper-, ing music which . Alice , lying beneath their shade , delighted to listen to . Oh , glorious , to-be-remembered June afternoons that Alice AVest idled away , unconscious and regardless of time ' s swift flight , amidst the grand dumb beauty of

Rookstone Park ! And not always alone was she . Often , ay , very often , would the blind master of Rookstone bo her companion in those dreamlike rambles— dangerously happy , delicious , beautiful rambles , "while the golden sun shone brightly through the interlacing branches overhead , where the birds sang joyously amongst the leaves

Their old melodious madrigal of love . Those two , Lowndes Forrester and Alice AVest , were happy indeed in those halcyon June afternoons , although the world , with all its beauty , ho could not see . It was such an ago since he had listened to the

sound of a young girl ' s voice with any interest ; such an age , in fact , since he had listened to a youthful voice at all . Not until the advent of aunt Jem ' s companion had he awakened to the knowledge that the world was not so full of misery as he

had taught himself to believe . In truth he had almost forgotten what the world was like . After his trouble he had withdrawn himself from all pleasure ; for his life was cold , and dark , and dreary , and ho and gladness henceforth must be as total

strangers . So he had said ; but lately his faith in his own doctrine had been strangely shaken , and gentle , lovely Alice AVest had become inexpressibly dear to him during the short four months of her stay at Rookstone .

Leaning on her arm , the strong helpless man would take much longer walks than lie had for years been accustomed to ; under her watchful and careful guidance he re-visited many well-loved nooks and

“The Masonic Magazine: 1874-05-01, Page 5” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 24 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01051874/page/5/.
  • 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.

Bookstore Priory.

BOOKSTORE PRIORY .

( From Keystone . ) CHAPTER II [ . For Alice AVest the days glided swiftly past during her first three months at Rookstone Priory—so swiftly that when

sunny May dawned , and molted in due time into glorious , leafy June , she could hardly believe that her sojourn had been so long in the quiet old house , of the gloom of - which she never seemed to be conscious . She was now thoroughl

y initiated into the li ght duties expected of her as Mrs . Lorrimore ' s companion , and had learned to love the kind-hearted , motherly , drowsy old lady with all the warmth of her loving gwlisli heart . And Alice AVest was very happy ; she had

never been so happy in her life before . Earnestly did she strive to repay , by a thousand little acts born of ever-watchful care , the manifold kindness which the blind master of Rookstone and his lovable aunt Jem showered upon her so plentifully as the days went by .

Miss AVest ' s first duty of the day was to read prayers . Her last was the same . After breakfast she read a little , worked a little , and talked a little with Mrs . Lorrimorc , who dozed between whiles , and put a few stitches in a ponderous piece of

woolwork raised on an equally ponderous wool-frame , representing " The Passage of the Israelites through the Red Sea , " in which representation the pursued and the pursuers were uncomfortably near to one anotherand the perspective of the whole

, was , to say tho least of it , doubtful . Mrs . Lorriniore had been working at Pharaoh ' s upraised arm on and off for the last two years . ( She often expressed her wonder to Alice if the "Passage through the Red Sea" would ever fulfil its intended

purpose , which was the covering of an immense fat-looking cushion of the softest order for the back of Mrs . Lorrimore ' s own especial arm-chair .

Alice frequently begged to be allowed to assist in the completion of Pharaoh , but aunt Jem would never hear of it . " I began it , my dear , all by myself ; I mean to finish it all myself . I think I shall manage it by-and-by . "

After luncheon till tho first dinner-bell rang , Alice ' s fcinio was her own , to do with it as she vdcased—whether to wander through the deserted garden and shady park , or to revel in tho scrono rruiescence which hovered round the Priory .

Rookstone in the early summer was a very paradise of earthly beauty . Tho gardens were shady , tho flowers beautiful and odorous , tho grass soft , and the trees , which grow and shivered in tho summer breezes near to the housefull of a

whisper-, ing music which . Alice , lying beneath their shade , delighted to listen to . Oh , glorious , to-be-remembered June afternoons that Alice AVest idled away , unconscious and regardless of time ' s swift flight , amidst the grand dumb beauty of

Rookstone Park ! And not always alone was she . Often , ay , very often , would the blind master of Rookstone bo her companion in those dreamlike rambles— dangerously happy , delicious , beautiful rambles , "while the golden sun shone brightly through the interlacing branches overhead , where the birds sang joyously amongst the leaves

Their old melodious madrigal of love . Those two , Lowndes Forrester and Alice AVest , were happy indeed in those halcyon June afternoons , although the world , with all its beauty , ho could not see . It was such an ago since he had listened to the

sound of a young girl ' s voice with any interest ; such an age , in fact , since he had listened to a youthful voice at all . Not until the advent of aunt Jem ' s companion had he awakened to the knowledge that the world was not so full of misery as he

had taught himself to believe . In truth he had almost forgotten what the world was like . After his trouble he had withdrawn himself from all pleasure ; for his life was cold , and dark , and dreary , and ho and gladness henceforth must be as total

strangers . So he had said ; but lately his faith in his own doctrine had been strangely shaken , and gentle , lovely Alice AVest had become inexpressibly dear to him during the short four months of her stay at Rookstone .

Leaning on her arm , the strong helpless man would take much longer walks than lie had for years been accustomed to ; under her watchful and careful guidance he re-visited many well-loved nooks and

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