2 THE MASONIC JOUHNAl. IS .o.i ; jilf; 1 ■'ll ^ ■ . 'cM'a ■ ■ k' i • .* ^■' • c lli. I" ^ ’ .l! Masonic Lodge. Sliould the ctiances of life ever tempt me to roam, lira liOilge of Freemasons I’ll still find a home, There the sweet smile of Friendship still wel comes cacli guest And Brotherl}^ Love gives that welcome a aost. When I’m absent from I.odge pleasure tempts mo in vain, As I sigh for the moments of meeting again; For Friendship and Harmony only are there, Inhere we meet on the level and part on the square. I’here tb.e soul-binding union only is known, Wliicb unites botli the peasant and prince on tiie throne. There tlie rich and the poor on the level do meet. And, as brotliers, each otlier most cordially greet. On the quicksands of life should a brotiier be thrown; It is then tliat the friendsliip of brothers is siiov n; For tlie heart points the hand, his distress to remove. For our motto is “Kindness and Brotlierly Love.” When tlie Master of all, from His star-studded throne, f.haU is^ue His mandate to summon us liorne. May eaoii brotiier be found to be duly pre pared, in the Grand Lodge above us, to meet his re- wai-d. The Mason’s Widow. During the Mexican, war,-a lad of 16, .a daring young Virginian, leaped a fence and climbed a parapet some hundred yards in advance of his company, and was taken prisoner, but not until lie Lad killed three Mexicans and mortally wounded a Colonel. His mother, a poor widow, heard his fate, and as he was her only sou, her heart yearned for his re lease. She wept at the thought, but while the tears were streaming down her cheeks, suddenly she recollected she was a Mason’s widow. Hope lighted up in her bosom at the thought—she dried her tears, and exclaimed: “I will go and test the talismanic pow er of the Order my husband loved and levered so much.” She sold the few articles of furniture slie possessed, and with the money reach ed the city of Washington on foot. In her dusty attire she entered the depart ment of the Secretary of War, and with some difficulty obtained an interview. .As she entered the apartment in which he was seated, and he saw her dusty at- •fre, “Well, ma’am,’’ was the salutation he gave her ; but when she removed her veil, and he saw the visage of 'the lady, he half rvay raised himself in Ills chair, and pointed hei to a seat. She told him of her son's capture, and her wish to go to him. “I can’t help you, ma’am,’’ he replied, ' a very expensive journey to the city of Mexico. Your son will be released by and by on exchange of prisoners.” “Sir, ■will you be so kind as to reoom-> mend me to the care of the officer in com mand of the regiment which is to sail in a few days from Baltimore.” “Impossible, ma’am,” he replied. “Sir,” raid the widow, “I have one more question to ask before I leave your office, and I pray you to answer it. Are you a Mason ? “Yes, ma’am, I am.” “Then, sir, permit me to say that I am a Mason’s widow, and my son in prison is a Mason’s son. With this declaration I leave your office.” That moment the Secretary’s manner was changed to that of the mojt courteous interest. He entreated her to be seated until he could write a line to the Seoreta rv of State. In a few minute.she present ed her with a note to the Secretary of State recommending her to his sympathy and friendship. The Secretary of State received her most kindly, and gave her a letter to the commandant at New Orl eans, directing him to procure her a free passage to Vera Cruz by the first steam er. Through the agetoy of the two Sec retaries, the Lodges placed in lier Lands three hundred dollars, with a talismanic card from the Grand Master at Washing ton, and the widow left the city. When she reached Pittsburg, the stage agent, seeing the letter she bore from the Grand Master, would receive nothing for her passage—the captain of the steamer on wbrch she embarked for New Orleans no sooner deciphered it than he gave to her the best state room he had, and when she reached the Crescent City she had two hundred and ninety dollars left of her three hundred. She there waited on the General in command of the station, w'ith the letter of the Secretary of Slate, who immediately instructed the Colonel in command of the forwarding troops to see that she had a free passage to \ era Cruz by the first steamer. By all the of ficers she was treated with the greatest politeness and delicacy, for they were all Masons, and felt bound to her by ties as strong and delicate as those which bind a brother to a sister, and rejoiced in the opportunity afforded them of evincing the benign and noble principles of the Craft. After a pass.rge of five days she reached A’^era Cruz, and having a letter from the commandant at New Crleans to the Am erican Governor, she sent it to him, en- clo.sing the talismanic card she received from the Grand Master at Washington, The Governor immediately waited on her at the hotel, and offered her a transport to the city of Mexico by a train that was to start the next morning. The .colonel commanding the train kindly took her in charge and afforded her every facility and comfort on her journey, provided her with a carriage when the country was level, and with mule.sand palanquins over the mountains. AVithin ninoty miles of the city they were overtaken by a detachment of dragoons escorting a Government official to the general in command. Anxioustoget on faster, site asked permission of the colonel to join the detachment, and though informed of the danger and fatigue of hard rides day and night on horseback, she was willing to brave all, that she might sooiiei see her son. The colonel then provideil her with a fleet and gentle gair-ed Mexican pony, and she assumed her place with the troops, escorted by the officers, and never flagged until the towers of Mexico were in sight. She reached the city on the second day’s battle, and in the heat of it attempt ed to enter the gates. An officer instant ly seized her bridle and told her she i must wait until the city was taken. “Oh, sir !’’ she exclaimed, “I cannot “The citj' must first be taken, madam,” he again replied, with much emphasis. “I cannot wait, sir,” she replieil; “my son—ray only son—may be ill—dying— in chains—in a dungeon. One hour’s delay may remove him from me. Oh ! I must goto him—I will enter the citv.” “Madam,” said the officer, “you cannot reach it but by crossing the battle field. Yon will surely be killed.” “Sir,” said the lady. “I have not trav eled from Virginia to the gates of this city to fear to enter them. Thanks for your kindness—a thousand heartfelt thanks for you and the officers who have been so kind to me. I .sliaU always re member these officers with the most grateful feelings of my heart—but do not detain me longer. A^onder is a gate that leads to the city. I will enter it in search of my dear boy.” And on she sped, but ere she reached the gate another officer roue up 'ey her side and admonished her of her danger and imprudence. “Sir,” she replied, “this is no time to talk of prudence and fear. My son—my only son—is a prisoner in chains. lam told that Santa Anna is in the midst of yon glittering group, I will seek him and place in his hand this talismanic card I bear. He is a Mason, and will heed me,” “AA’ar destroys all Brotherhood,’’ said the officer, who was not a Mason. She made no reply, but struck her po» ny and darted across the field of death. At that moment the masked battery that mowed down one half the Palmetto regi ment, opened—yet right across the gory field she was seen galloping on her white ponv, avoiding the retreating platoons by a semi-circle around their flank—the next moment she was seen coursing over the ground in the rear, the baltery in full play. Hundreds seeing her, stopped, forget ful of the storm of iron balls that howled around them, to follow with tlieir eyes what seemed to be an apparirion. All expected to see her fall every moment, but on she went with a fearless air, “The woman’s love for her son has made her wild,” said the officer who at tempted to arrest her flight. “She will surely be killed,” said an other soldier. “The God of battle will protect her,” exclaimed a Tennesseean ; “she will reach Santa Anna as sound as a rock.” The soldier was right—she went over the field of death and reached Santa An na unhurt. He received her politely, and when she told him her errand and presented her talismanic card, "Aladam,” said be, 'Tama Mason,and know the obligations of the Order in peace and in war. When your son was taken prison er he mortally wounded my maternal nephew, who is now dead. But he shall be restored ; for I will not refuse your request in the face of the letter that you bear.” He immediately gave her an escort to the city, with an order to restore her son to her arms. The order was promptly obeyed, and that very day, as she prom ised, she embraced her long lost boy. So much for a mother’s love, and so much for the protecting arm and noble sympathetic heart which Masonry ever extends to lonely, hapless woman. Oh, if widowhood be the doom of women, who would not be a Mason’s rvidow?— What I Lost. “I have been thinking, since I came in to the meeting to-niijht, about the losses I have met with sines I signed the total abstinence pledge. I tell you, there isn’t a man in the society has lost more by stopping the drink than I have. Wait® bit till I tell you what I mean. There was a nice job of work to be done in the shop to day, and the boss called for me, “Give it to Law.’’ ha"s he, ‘he’s the best hand in the shop.’ Well, I told my wife at supper time, and ears she, ‘Why Laa- rie, he used to call you the worst. You've lost your bad name, iiavent you.?’ ‘That’s a fact, wife says I, and it aint all Iv'e lost in the last sixteen months, either. I had poverty and wretchedness, and I’ve lost them. I had an old ragged coat, ami a ‘shockin bad hat.’ and some waterproof boots that let the wet out of the toe as fast as they took it in at the heel. I’ve lost them. I had a red face and a tremb ling hand and a pair of shaky legs, that gave me an awkward tiimb.e now and then. I had a habit of cursinr and .swear ing, and I have got rid of that. I had an aching head sometimes, and a heavy heart, and worse than all the'rest a guil ty consffieiice. I thank God I've lost them all / Then I told my wife what .sue had lost. ‘You had an old ragged gown, Mary,’ says I. ‘and you had trouble and sorrow and a poor wretoheU home, and pledty of heart aches, for yon had a mis erable drudkard for a husband. Marv .? Mary ! thank the lord for all you and I have lost since I signed the pledge,^ There is no Place like Home. wait one hour in sight of the city that ! Who would not be a Mason’s wife moth- holds my son a prisoner-I must see | daughter or sister in the hour of peril hinr.” ! and need ?—Canadian Teacher. This poetic phrase is no less beautifnl than true. AVe find I hat the fond at tachment of home pervades all ranks and classes of society. The wandering Scyth ians, with no abiding habitation, main tained great reg^ard and veneration for the place where the bones of their fore- falhersslumbeied. Even the rude and untutored denizen of the great Ameri can forests, whose dauntless spirit never quails before a foe, lias, nevertheless, a heart which beats high -with the warmest love toward his friends and for the spot where stands his wigwam. But, in civil ized society, what is it that binds every sympathizing feeling of the heart around the cottage where our fathers dw elt? Is it because there is more intrinsic worth attached to it, or is it those heaven born associations which connect each brook or rill, each hill and dale, with some joyful recollection of happy hours spent in the company of a youthful friend, who now, perh.aps, sleeps beneath the cold sod of the valley? A." os, it tends more firmly to rivet the ties of affection, to point to the imagination scenes which occurred at home, and to call up, from the wrecks of the past, hours sacred to memory. Yet these associations, joyous as they are, would sink into comparative nothingness if, from that circle, where we spent our youthful days in the sunshine of pleasure, was removed—a mother I Aet home, sweet as it is, would belike a temple stripped of its garlands, were it not for the sacred name of mother to consecrate its portals. Like the evening dew, whic’n scatters its fragrance wliile all else is wrapped in the slumber of night, the mother, while every other ear is deaf, is attentive to our griefs, mingles her tears in the enp of our misfortune and soothes our dying agony. AVhat a solemn place for contemplation is the grave of our mother I ’•'’g ( ' A** A '