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  • The Masonic Magazine
  • July 1, 1877
  • Page 34
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The Masonic Magazine, July 1, 1877: Page 34

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    Article CARA IMAGO. ← Page 2 of 2
    Article HARRY WATSON; Page 1 of 3 →
Page 34

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

Cara Imago.

Yet even now on this hazy scene , Thy bright face seems to shine , And on the trust which once has been , Thy glad smile beams benign ! So that neither desolate nor forlorn ,

When hope is fled and vain , I still look on to a radiant morn , When I shall see thee again . No longer only a vision In shadoAvy form supreme ,

No more in sad transition Thou art only a fading dream ; But full of thy fond affection Which lightened each hope of dust , Beyond fear and dark dejection , Thou livest for love and trust ! NEMO .

Harry Watson;

HARRY WATSON ;

OR , THE SECRETS OP FREEMASONRY . BY H . A , M . HENDERSON . From the " Kentucky Freemason . " "AND are you going to join the Masons and

have secrets you cannot tell your Avife 1 " said Mrs . Watson to her young husband , as he got up from the tea-table and informed her of his purpose to unite with the Lodge that night . The question was put in a pouting Avay , and loaded with

that tone of remonstrance which women knoAV so well how to use , and which is more poAverful than the words employed . Let a Avoman put her heart into her speech , and words seem to take on fresh forms as they fall from her ruby lips , and

even common ideas are transformed into poetic fancies as they pass through the alembic of her mind . Mr . and Mrs . "Watson had been married but a year , and during this time he had told his Avife all his troubles and plans , and

entrusted to her keeping everything he knew , or felt , or learned . She , therefore , could not well bear the thought of his coming into possession of facts or principles that he could not disclose to her . Then he had never left her sight after

nightfall , but had lingered to listen to her voice translate to his enchanted ear the grand conceptions of the old bards sublime , or to hear her own tuneful measures in song thrill his soul with the sweetest accents . Should he join the Lodge , he

would go to its meetings and she would be deprived of her audience , and the lonely hours would hang heavy on her hands . Then , too , her pastor was violently opposed to ail secret societies , and she feared his saintly frown when it was

known that Mr . Watson had plighted faith and entered into covenant with a society deemed by his reverence as sacriligious . All these things were gently gone over in a trembling tone that seemed to be pathos itself , ancl each sentence Avas punctuated

with a bright , sparkling tear , while the liquid eyes gazed pleadingly into those of the husband . Harry Watson felt sorry that he had applied for admission , and could he have Avithdrawn his petition that moment he would doubtless have done so , but he had been balloted for and elected , and the

Craft had congratulated him on the clear ballot he had received , and a special meeting had been appointed for his initiation , and an expert in conducting the ritual exercises had been invited from abroad , and to parley then with hesitation seemed to him unworthy of a resolute manand

, treachery to those who had honoured him with their votes and provided the very best conditions for his introduction to the venerable Order . So mustering up courage , he engaged in the first argument with his wifeand said : " Darling , my

, father was a Mason , and for many years engaged in the benevolent labours of this ancient Craft , haA'ing a most exalted opinion of the nature , design and Avorks of the institution . Many times have I heard him detail it labours of mercy . When he died

he requested that I should take his place in the Lodge . He was borne to burial by his brethren , and from the hour I turned from his grave , I have had a purpose to unite Avith the Order he loved so Avell in life , and that had laid him in Ms grave with such tender fraternal hands when dead .

"It is selfish for a man to live for himself , and exhaust his heart upon his family , It is true that' Charity begins at home , ' but it should not end there . All vital

“The Masonic Magazine: 1877-07-01, Page 34” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 25 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01071877/page/34/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
PREFACE Article 2
INDEX. Article 4
Monthly Masonic Summary. Article 7
SONNET. Article 7
HISTORY OF THE "PRINCE OF WALES LODGE." Article 8
SUMMER. Article 18
THE ADVENTURES OF DON PASQUALE. Article 19
TRAM-CAES AND OMNIBUSES. Article 22
WONDERS OF OPERATIVE MASONRY. Article 24
THE TRUE FREEMASON. Article 26
TOM HOOD. Article 27
IN MEMORIAM — BRO. GEORGE FRANK GOULEY. Article 30
THE HISTORY OF EDUCATION. Article 32
CARA IMAGO. Article 33
HARRY WATSON; Article 34
EVERY YEAR. Article 36
THE WORK OF NATURE IN THE MONTHS. Article 37
BRO. JAMES NEWTON'S SKETCH OF THE CONCORD ROYAL ARCH CHAPTER, No. 37, BOLTON. Article 41
"ABSENT FRIENDS." Article 42
SHIRTS AND COLLARS. Article 43
Our Archaeological Corner. Article 46
A Review. Article 47
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE AND ART. Article 50
Forgotten Stories. Article 53
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Page 34

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

Cara Imago.

Yet even now on this hazy scene , Thy bright face seems to shine , And on the trust which once has been , Thy glad smile beams benign ! So that neither desolate nor forlorn ,

When hope is fled and vain , I still look on to a radiant morn , When I shall see thee again . No longer only a vision In shadoAvy form supreme ,

No more in sad transition Thou art only a fading dream ; But full of thy fond affection Which lightened each hope of dust , Beyond fear and dark dejection , Thou livest for love and trust ! NEMO .

Harry Watson;

HARRY WATSON ;

OR , THE SECRETS OP FREEMASONRY . BY H . A , M . HENDERSON . From the " Kentucky Freemason . " "AND are you going to join the Masons and

have secrets you cannot tell your Avife 1 " said Mrs . Watson to her young husband , as he got up from the tea-table and informed her of his purpose to unite with the Lodge that night . The question was put in a pouting Avay , and loaded with

that tone of remonstrance which women knoAV so well how to use , and which is more poAverful than the words employed . Let a Avoman put her heart into her speech , and words seem to take on fresh forms as they fall from her ruby lips , and

even common ideas are transformed into poetic fancies as they pass through the alembic of her mind . Mr . and Mrs . "Watson had been married but a year , and during this time he had told his Avife all his troubles and plans , and

entrusted to her keeping everything he knew , or felt , or learned . She , therefore , could not well bear the thought of his coming into possession of facts or principles that he could not disclose to her . Then he had never left her sight after

nightfall , but had lingered to listen to her voice translate to his enchanted ear the grand conceptions of the old bards sublime , or to hear her own tuneful measures in song thrill his soul with the sweetest accents . Should he join the Lodge , he

would go to its meetings and she would be deprived of her audience , and the lonely hours would hang heavy on her hands . Then , too , her pastor was violently opposed to ail secret societies , and she feared his saintly frown when it was

known that Mr . Watson had plighted faith and entered into covenant with a society deemed by his reverence as sacriligious . All these things were gently gone over in a trembling tone that seemed to be pathos itself , ancl each sentence Avas punctuated

with a bright , sparkling tear , while the liquid eyes gazed pleadingly into those of the husband . Harry Watson felt sorry that he had applied for admission , and could he have Avithdrawn his petition that moment he would doubtless have done so , but he had been balloted for and elected , and the

Craft had congratulated him on the clear ballot he had received , and a special meeting had been appointed for his initiation , and an expert in conducting the ritual exercises had been invited from abroad , and to parley then with hesitation seemed to him unworthy of a resolute manand

, treachery to those who had honoured him with their votes and provided the very best conditions for his introduction to the venerable Order . So mustering up courage , he engaged in the first argument with his wifeand said : " Darling , my

, father was a Mason , and for many years engaged in the benevolent labours of this ancient Craft , haA'ing a most exalted opinion of the nature , design and Avorks of the institution . Many times have I heard him detail it labours of mercy . When he died

he requested that I should take his place in the Lodge . He was borne to burial by his brethren , and from the hour I turned from his grave , I have had a purpose to unite Avith the Order he loved so Avell in life , and that had laid him in Ms grave with such tender fraternal hands when dead .

"It is selfish for a man to live for himself , and exhaust his heart upon his family , It is true that' Charity begins at home , ' but it should not end there . All vital

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