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  • The Masonic Magazine
  • Sept. 1, 1876
  • Page 27
  • TAKEN BY BRIGANDS.
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The Masonic Magazine, Sept. 1, 1876: Page 27

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    Article TAKEN BY BRIGANDS. ← Page 2 of 7 →
Page 27

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

Taken By Brigands.

I learned to read and to write and to c ; pher—ay , and a bit of mathematics beside . I can take an observation with any captain afloat , and if I am before the mast at this day , my ainself is to blame for it , and nae one else .

I mig ht have had good help for it if I had been canny and steady , for the young laird took a fancy to me . It Avas a lonely country , ye ken , and he had nae companions of his own rank and position in lifeso he was obleeged to take

, up with humble bodies , or go without p laymates at all . But he treated me differently to the others—a ' most , as one might say , as a friend . When he Avas old enough to have a boat of his ainhe made me the keeper

, of it—his " crew , " he used to call me ; and my father and brothers seldom had my company out fishing , for gin a boat could live at all , MacKenzie lvas sure to be cruising about . My mother was pleased enough . I was

her favourite bairn , and she thought I escaped a deal of toil and danger . So far as the toil went , nae doubt she was right enough , but I am not so sure , but Avhat

my father ' s coble Avas the safest berth of the twa . MacKenzie Avas reckless when a lad , and never so happy as Avhen he had a good chance of droAvning , or of breaking his neck hirds ' -nesting over the cliffs . The young laird was an orphan , and under the care of his uncleArchibald MacKenzie

, , who just let him gang his ain gait . There were foul-tongued loons who said that the guardian would nae break his heart if his nephew did come to a sudden end , and so put him into the lairdshi p himself . But let alone that there never was a false

MacKenzie yet , Archibald had no ambition in him . He cared nae mair for laud , or position , or sport , or good living , than I do for the vinegar stuff the French bodies miscall wine . No one who once saw Archibald

Mac-Kenzie ever forgot him . When the laird grew up into a young man he Avent awa to Edinburgh toAvn , and 1 helped my father with the fishing for a time ; but it happened there was a bit of a lassie wha didna know her OAVU mind exactly , that unsettled me ; and when , at last , she took up with another lad , I couldna stop quietly in my am country at all ; and as I got a Avee bit

wild and quarrelsome , and , perhaps , too fond of a drap of whisky , neither father nor mother sought to stop me Avhen I said I'd take a cruize . So I shipped on board a whaler , and cooled my passion in the Arctic circle , and

when I came back I engaged in a vessel bound for the Gold Coast , and cauterized my heart in the tropics . I was pretty Avell cured of love by then , but not of the taste for roving . I nae got that stilland never can bide in one place

, for more than a month at a time . When I had been drifting about the world for seven or eig ht years , I got a bit of a rise in it , and served as mate on board a blockade-runner , chartered to carry contraband of Avar into Crete , which was in a

state of insurrection . The captain was a Frenchman , the other mate a Sicilian , and the crew included an Englishman , a Yankee , a nigger , •and a Chinaman ; the rest were Greeks and Italians . They were the most desperate

set of fellows , taking them around , I ever sailed Avith , and that is saying something ; and the first mate , Giacomo , Avas about the most reckless aud quick-tempered of

the lot of them . But I kept a civil tongue in my head , and Ave were always vera gude friends . Still I wasna sorry , what with the general character of my shipmates , and the great chance of being taken and hanged , Avhen the cruise was oi er ; especially as

, for the first time in my life , I had a little sum of money in my pocket , which I hoped would give me a bit of a start on my ain account . And maybe it would , but the brig in Avhich I was coming home Avas cast away on the coast of Spainand I lost

, everything I had in the world , even to my shirt , and Avas g lad , a Aveek or two afterward , to work my passage to Southampton . Weel , I was standing on the quay of that place , looking doAvn into the water , telling myself it was no use greeting over

spilt milk , and thinking Avhether I would try the Peninsular or Oriental , or gie the royal navy the benefit of my services , when someone clapped me on the shoulder , with an "Eh , Sandy , is that you ? " and turning round I saw my laird , the Mac-Kenzie himsel ' . " How are you getting on 1 " said he . " Not vera weel , I fear . "

“The Masonic Magazine: 1876-09-01, Page 27” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 6 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01091876/page/27/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
Monthly Masonic Summary. Article 1
"THE GOOSE AND GRIDIRON," Article 2
DR. RAWLINSON'S MS. Article 3
THE CHARGE. Article 7
THE CREATION. Article 8
AN OLD, OLD STORY. Article 12
BE HAPPY AS YOU CAN. Article 14
SOCIAL PROBLEMS AND THEIR PEACEFUL SOLUTION. Article 15
THE ORIGIN AND REFERENCES OF THE HERMESIAN SPURIOUS FREEMASONRY. Article 18
THE WOMEN OF OUR TIME. Article 20
" GLAMOUR." Article 22
ZOROASTRIANISM AND FREEMASONRY. Article 22
OUT WITH THE TIDE. Article 25
TAKEN BY BRIGANDS. Article 26
MAGIC. Article 32
FAIRY TALES UTILISED FOR THE NEW GENERATION. Article 32
THE MUSICAL ENTHUSIAST. Article 34
CONTEMPORARY LETTERS ON THE FRENCH REVOLUTION. Article 34
Our Archaological Corner. Article 35
Untitled Article 36
ISRAEL AND ENGLAND. Article 36
REVIEWS. Article 39
ADDRESS OF P.G.M. BRO. HON. RICHARD VAUX, AT CENTENNIAL OF AMERICAN UNION LODGE. Article 43
A CONFESSION. Article 45
NOTES ON LITERATURE , SCIENCE AND ART. Article 46
Untitled Article 48
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Page 27

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

Taken By Brigands.

I learned to read and to write and to c ; pher—ay , and a bit of mathematics beside . I can take an observation with any captain afloat , and if I am before the mast at this day , my ainself is to blame for it , and nae one else .

I mig ht have had good help for it if I had been canny and steady , for the young laird took a fancy to me . It Avas a lonely country , ye ken , and he had nae companions of his own rank and position in lifeso he was obleeged to take

, up with humble bodies , or go without p laymates at all . But he treated me differently to the others—a ' most , as one might say , as a friend . When he Avas old enough to have a boat of his ainhe made me the keeper

, of it—his " crew , " he used to call me ; and my father and brothers seldom had my company out fishing , for gin a boat could live at all , MacKenzie lvas sure to be cruising about . My mother was pleased enough . I was

her favourite bairn , and she thought I escaped a deal of toil and danger . So far as the toil went , nae doubt she was right enough , but I am not so sure , but Avhat

my father ' s coble Avas the safest berth of the twa . MacKenzie Avas reckless when a lad , and never so happy as Avhen he had a good chance of droAvning , or of breaking his neck hirds ' -nesting over the cliffs . The young laird was an orphan , and under the care of his uncleArchibald MacKenzie

, , who just let him gang his ain gait . There were foul-tongued loons who said that the guardian would nae break his heart if his nephew did come to a sudden end , and so put him into the lairdshi p himself . But let alone that there never was a false

MacKenzie yet , Archibald had no ambition in him . He cared nae mair for laud , or position , or sport , or good living , than I do for the vinegar stuff the French bodies miscall wine . No one who once saw Archibald

Mac-Kenzie ever forgot him . When the laird grew up into a young man he Avent awa to Edinburgh toAvn , and 1 helped my father with the fishing for a time ; but it happened there was a bit of a lassie wha didna know her OAVU mind exactly , that unsettled me ; and when , at last , she took up with another lad , I couldna stop quietly in my am country at all ; and as I got a Avee bit

wild and quarrelsome , and , perhaps , too fond of a drap of whisky , neither father nor mother sought to stop me Avhen I said I'd take a cruize . So I shipped on board a whaler , and cooled my passion in the Arctic circle , and

when I came back I engaged in a vessel bound for the Gold Coast , and cauterized my heart in the tropics . I was pretty Avell cured of love by then , but not of the taste for roving . I nae got that stilland never can bide in one place

, for more than a month at a time . When I had been drifting about the world for seven or eig ht years , I got a bit of a rise in it , and served as mate on board a blockade-runner , chartered to carry contraband of Avar into Crete , which was in a

state of insurrection . The captain was a Frenchman , the other mate a Sicilian , and the crew included an Englishman , a Yankee , a nigger , •and a Chinaman ; the rest were Greeks and Italians . They were the most desperate

set of fellows , taking them around , I ever sailed Avith , and that is saying something ; and the first mate , Giacomo , Avas about the most reckless aud quick-tempered of

the lot of them . But I kept a civil tongue in my head , and Ave were always vera gude friends . Still I wasna sorry , what with the general character of my shipmates , and the great chance of being taken and hanged , Avhen the cruise was oi er ; especially as

, for the first time in my life , I had a little sum of money in my pocket , which I hoped would give me a bit of a start on my ain account . And maybe it would , but the brig in Avhich I was coming home Avas cast away on the coast of Spainand I lost

, everything I had in the world , even to my shirt , and Avas g lad , a Aveek or two afterward , to work my passage to Southampton . Weel , I was standing on the quay of that place , looking doAvn into the water , telling myself it was no use greeting over

spilt milk , and thinking Avhether I would try the Peninsular or Oriental , or gie the royal navy the benefit of my services , when someone clapped me on the shoulder , with an "Eh , Sandy , is that you ? " and turning round I saw my laird , the Mac-Kenzie himsel ' . " How are you getting on 1 " said he . " Not vera weel , I fear . "

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