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  • Dec. 1, 1889
  • Page 15
  • THE VOLUME OF THE SACRED LAW.
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The Masonic Review, Dec. 1, 1889: Page 15

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

The Volume Of The Sacred Law.

THE VOLUME OF THE SACRED LAW .

P . V HERBERT O'GRADY .

CHAPTER I . Being your slave , what should I do but tend Upon the hours and times of your desire ? I have no precious time at all to spend , Nor services to do , till you require .

, ' { H l | l 8 || k \ t ICHARD is coming " * jj yK % T # - tolcl me at least ' «? ft \ P- a mindred times since

- jffA ^ Tuesday . I v . llhlpv really think , Ger-¦ < f '¦ trude , you get more in love with your husband every time he leaves you . "

It was a sad little body that came up from behind , and laid its flushed cheek against that of Mrs . Oakhurst . It was sad because it hated to be reminded of the absence of the only

man who had ever caused its eyes to sparkle and its cheeks to grow crimson , but it soon lost its pained expression and was laughing the next moment as gaily and as heartily as ever .

" How long is he to stay this time ?" asked Mrs . Oakhurst , when Gertrude had done kissing and hugging her to

death . WSSBBSBttl " He says a week in his letter . But o ^&™ B £ SffiPMBSKKl ! l I'" M ¦ ¦ , W ^^^^ - ^^ y ^ xt . let me read it to you , mother " : —¦ &' 1 . ¦ J ^^ M ^ -- *^^^ MaS 8 " I shall not , however , be able to . f ^ PisSl leave London darlingmuch before ^ .. ?

, my , ^ ^ epa the early part of the afternoon , and will ' - . M ~ ^ % dine in town . A cup of tea will give us . j £ s I " greater leisure than dinner would , to tell all ^ 1 ^ ^ we have to tell each other , and you know how much I enjoy tea of your brewing . I left my people in Rome ,

after having nearly exhausted my ingenuity in pitching upon a feasible excuse to return to England ; but I am on my way to you , my dear , dear wife , and let my first glimpse of you be had standing at the garden-gate you have made so charming with your flowers , so that I may know you arc waiting for me , even as I am waiting to meet you again . " It was only just twelve , and four long hours must be got through

before Richard would arrive . Gertrude was a very happy woman , for her husband , though always away from home , was very good to her . He had bought her this sweet little cottage at Chertsey two years ago , and had furnished it quite luxuriously . With a couple of well-behaved domestics , a full-grown boy to look after "

Spinaway "—a dark chestnut pony—a liberal quarterly allowance paid in to her account at the local bank , and the companionship of her dear mother , Gertrude could not have wished for another gratification . She had met Richard Rawlinson in Devonshire , when she was staying with her mother at a little seaside fishing village on the

' *^^ f | i ||| k ; . „ ' * " " > southern coast , trying to ^* *& ^ Bli & si *&__ paint pictures of the swarthy 1 # P ^«§« jg ^^> = ^__^ fisherfolk , and help the little sea urchins to read and write . It was just that old story that never has a beginning . She was seated one morning on the

beach , making a study of the bleak rocks and chalk cliffs that climbed up out of the rolling sea , just where the local civilisation gave place to the rugged nature of the coast , when a gentleman she had not seen before in the village approached her easel , and politely asked her for some information of the locality . For what

reason should the details of this maturing affection be given ? Some weeks after , three persons drove up to the ivy-covered church at Nethersea , a neighboring village ; and two of them were made man and wife . A happy honeymoon among the fishers and their families was spent , as if the whole world did not contain a more suitahle

place for the young couple , and then , after a few weeks' absence , Richard Rawlinson went again into Devonshire to fetch his wife B

“The Masonic Review: 1889-12-01, Page 15” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 24 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/msr/issues/msr_01121889/page/15/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
CONTENTS. Article 1
ANOTHER YEAR. Article 1
Round and About. Article 2
Masonic Mems. Article 4
Untitled Article 8
Eminent Masons at Home. Article 8
THE TREASURER. Article 10
GRAND LODGE OF ENGLAND. Article 11
GRAND LODGE OF SCOTLAND. Article 11
GRAND MARK LODGE. Article 11
BOOKS AND PERIODICALS RECEIVED. Article 11
Among the Bohemians. Article 12
Colonial and Foreign. Article 13
Gathered Chips. Article 14
Answers to Correspondents. Article 14
THE VOLUME OF THE SACRED LAW. Article 15
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

The Volume Of The Sacred Law.

THE VOLUME OF THE SACRED LAW .

P . V HERBERT O'GRADY .

CHAPTER I . Being your slave , what should I do but tend Upon the hours and times of your desire ? I have no precious time at all to spend , Nor services to do , till you require .

, ' { H l | l 8 || k \ t ICHARD is coming " * jj yK % T # - tolcl me at least ' «? ft \ P- a mindred times since

- jffA ^ Tuesday . I v . llhlpv really think , Ger-¦ < f '¦ trude , you get more in love with your husband every time he leaves you . "

It was a sad little body that came up from behind , and laid its flushed cheek against that of Mrs . Oakhurst . It was sad because it hated to be reminded of the absence of the only

man who had ever caused its eyes to sparkle and its cheeks to grow crimson , but it soon lost its pained expression and was laughing the next moment as gaily and as heartily as ever .

" How long is he to stay this time ?" asked Mrs . Oakhurst , when Gertrude had done kissing and hugging her to

death . WSSBBSBttl " He says a week in his letter . But o ^&™ B £ SffiPMBSKKl ! l I'" M ¦ ¦ , W ^^^^ - ^^ y ^ xt . let me read it to you , mother " : —¦ &' 1 . ¦ J ^^ M ^ -- *^^^ MaS 8 " I shall not , however , be able to . f ^ PisSl leave London darlingmuch before ^ .. ?

, my , ^ ^ epa the early part of the afternoon , and will ' - . M ~ ^ % dine in town . A cup of tea will give us . j £ s I " greater leisure than dinner would , to tell all ^ 1 ^ ^ we have to tell each other , and you know how much I enjoy tea of your brewing . I left my people in Rome ,

after having nearly exhausted my ingenuity in pitching upon a feasible excuse to return to England ; but I am on my way to you , my dear , dear wife , and let my first glimpse of you be had standing at the garden-gate you have made so charming with your flowers , so that I may know you arc waiting for me , even as I am waiting to meet you again . " It was only just twelve , and four long hours must be got through

before Richard would arrive . Gertrude was a very happy woman , for her husband , though always away from home , was very good to her . He had bought her this sweet little cottage at Chertsey two years ago , and had furnished it quite luxuriously . With a couple of well-behaved domestics , a full-grown boy to look after "

Spinaway "—a dark chestnut pony—a liberal quarterly allowance paid in to her account at the local bank , and the companionship of her dear mother , Gertrude could not have wished for another gratification . She had met Richard Rawlinson in Devonshire , when she was staying with her mother at a little seaside fishing village on the

' *^^ f | i ||| k ; . „ ' * " " > southern coast , trying to ^* *& ^ Bli & si *&__ paint pictures of the swarthy 1 # P ^«§« jg ^^> = ^__^ fisherfolk , and help the little sea urchins to read and write . It was just that old story that never has a beginning . She was seated one morning on the

beach , making a study of the bleak rocks and chalk cliffs that climbed up out of the rolling sea , just where the local civilisation gave place to the rugged nature of the coast , when a gentleman she had not seen before in the village approached her easel , and politely asked her for some information of the locality . For what

reason should the details of this maturing affection be given ? Some weeks after , three persons drove up to the ivy-covered church at Nethersea , a neighboring village ; and two of them were made man and wife . A happy honeymoon among the fishers and their families was spent , as if the whole world did not contain a more suitahle

place for the young couple , and then , after a few weeks' absence , Richard Rawlinson went again into Devonshire to fetch his wife B

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