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  • The Masonic Magazine
  • Nov. 1, 1879
  • Page 19
  • TRYING TO CHANGE A SOVEREIGN.
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The Masonic Magazine, Nov. 1, 1879: Page 19

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    Article TRYING TO CHANGE A SOVEREIGN. ← Page 3 of 9 →
Page 19

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

Trying To Change A Sovereign.

in an ill-humour , impatiently awaiting dinner in tbe best room of tbe "Morpeth Arms " Inn , who , after quoting the Pandects , Duns Scotus , the book of Leviticus , Nostradamus , Solomon , Prester John , the great Panjandrum , and Saunders McKelvie , the paivkic baillie of Perth , and muttering something with a chuckle about " Jeddart justice , hang first ancl try afterwards , " ordered

poor Caleb Critchett to . be at once suspended from the branch of an elm tree which stood too conveniently near , his Majesty adding that he proposed attending the execution in person , and gastronomieally observing that " siccaii a seet was braAv , ancl ga' an unco' appeteete for a haggis , a cockaleekie , or a singgit rjOAV . " * So Critchett swung and the new royal lawgiver dined . f And Mrs . Critchett was a widow .

Not "tocherless , " hoAvever , as her husband ' s judge ivoitlcl hai'e remarked . No ; the late Mr . Critchett had prospered in the fencej business ; " he ought nei'er to have tried his hand at the other , he hadn ' t got the delicacy of touch for it , poor man , " his bereaved , OAAC observed , and if report spake sooth Mrs . Critchett was in a position to be a very reliable judge of the character of the deceased ' s touch , especially when the poor man was partially overcome with liquor ; and the establishment in Westminster made a very comfortable

home , with enough capital left to carry on a snug and profitable coa . l and potato business , to which the enterprising lad y shortly added the purveyance of " table beer licensed to be consumed on the premises , " ancl also the supplying of the A'ery best of Maryland shag tobacco , from his Majesty ' s western plantations , the which might be " drunk " with convenience iu the Avell-lightecl cellar . She ivas a gentle soul , but she had three pet aversions . Her special object

of denunciation Avas co-operative stores : secondly , she detested Scotsmen ; thirdly , she hated Jesuit priests . When , on a gloomy evening in March , 1604-5 , she was roused froin a placid dream of profits in the little room behind the shop , by the sharp trnldino- of the door bell , her first thought , as she looked out ancl beheld a stranger enter , was of a customer with a Civil Service ticket ; her second of a bony northcountryman with a heaA'y rusty-hilted rapier , six feet long , ancl a foot of that

“The Masonic Magazine: 1879-11-01, Page 19” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 25 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01111879/page/19/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
THE SANCTUARY OF MEMPHIS, OR HERMES: Article 1
THE HEATHER-CLAD MOOR. Article 9
A VISIT TO THE ENGLISH LAKES. Article 10
THE DAY IS DYING. Article 15
MASONIC CRAM. Article 16
TRYING TO CHANGE A SOVEREIGN. Article 17
MASONIC HYMN. Article 25
JOTTINGS AT HIGH XII. IN THE HOLY LAND. Article 26
THE CARBONARI. Article 28
AUTUMN. Article 30
BEATRICE. Article 31
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART. Article 35
TWO PICTURES. Article 37
MASONIC READING. Article 38
CONDITION OF FREEMASONRY IN SPAIN. Article 40
MUSIC. Article 41
ANNIVERSARY OF ST. JOHN. Article 41
THE EMIGRANT. Article 42
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Page 19

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

Trying To Change A Sovereign.

in an ill-humour , impatiently awaiting dinner in tbe best room of tbe "Morpeth Arms " Inn , who , after quoting the Pandects , Duns Scotus , the book of Leviticus , Nostradamus , Solomon , Prester John , the great Panjandrum , and Saunders McKelvie , the paivkic baillie of Perth , and muttering something with a chuckle about " Jeddart justice , hang first ancl try afterwards , " ordered

poor Caleb Critchett to . be at once suspended from the branch of an elm tree which stood too conveniently near , his Majesty adding that he proposed attending the execution in person , and gastronomieally observing that " siccaii a seet was braAv , ancl ga' an unco' appeteete for a haggis , a cockaleekie , or a singgit rjOAV . " * So Critchett swung and the new royal lawgiver dined . f And Mrs . Critchett was a widow .

Not "tocherless , " hoAvever , as her husband ' s judge ivoitlcl hai'e remarked . No ; the late Mr . Critchett had prospered in the fencej business ; " he ought nei'er to have tried his hand at the other , he hadn ' t got the delicacy of touch for it , poor man , " his bereaved , OAAC observed , and if report spake sooth Mrs . Critchett was in a position to be a very reliable judge of the character of the deceased ' s touch , especially when the poor man was partially overcome with liquor ; and the establishment in Westminster made a very comfortable

home , with enough capital left to carry on a snug and profitable coa . l and potato business , to which the enterprising lad y shortly added the purveyance of " table beer licensed to be consumed on the premises , " ancl also the supplying of the A'ery best of Maryland shag tobacco , from his Majesty ' s western plantations , the which might be " drunk " with convenience iu the Avell-lightecl cellar . She ivas a gentle soul , but she had three pet aversions . Her special object

of denunciation Avas co-operative stores : secondly , she detested Scotsmen ; thirdly , she hated Jesuit priests . When , on a gloomy evening in March , 1604-5 , she was roused froin a placid dream of profits in the little room behind the shop , by the sharp trnldino- of the door bell , her first thought , as she looked out ancl beheld a stranger enter , was of a customer with a Civil Service ticket ; her second of a bony northcountryman with a heaA'y rusty-hilted rapier , six feet long , ancl a foot of that

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