Skip to main content
Museum of Freemasonry

Masonic Periodicals Online

  • Explore
  • Advanced Search
  • Home
  • Explore
  • The Freemason's Chronicle
  • Nov. 1, 1879
  • Page 2
  • UNIFORMITY OF MASONIC RITUAL AND OBSERVANCE.
Current:

The Freemason's Chronicle, Nov. 1, 1879: Page 2

  • Back to The Freemason's Chronicle, Nov. 1, 1879
  • Print image
  • Articles/Ads
    Article CAUTION AND CHARITY. ← Page 2 of 2
    Article UNIFORMITY OF MASONIC RITUAL AND OBSERVANCE. Page 1 of 1
    Article CORRESPONDENCE Page 1 of 2 →
Page 2

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

Caution And Charity.

he can offer without detriment to himself or connections to prevent a repetition of these unkind remarks . In conclusion , we may mention that we are personally anxious to see Bro . Ace released from his present unfortunate condition , and we , therefore , refer our readers to the

letter of Bro . Saunders , which appears in another column , with a request that they will assist in the object Bro . Saunders has in view , —the restoring to Dr . Ace the furniture and other effects of which he has been—we hope but temporarily—deprived .

Uniformity Of Masonic Ritual And Observance.

UNIFORMITY OF MASONIC RITUAL AND OBSERVANCE .

THE publication of a work bearing the above title , by our esteemed correspondent , Bro . James Stevens , appears to have greatly exercised the minds of some members of the Craft , as well as those who were favourable to the movement commenced some years ago , and those who now object to any sort of interference with the present working

of Freemasonry . Doubtless there is much to be said on behalf of each of these parties . It is , nevertheless , none the less necessary , nay , probably , on that very account all essential , that some decision should be arrived at as to what really is meant by the desired " Uniformity . " On the one

hand we have Craftsmen who declare that the " pure and unsullied system , " so forcibly expressed in the Articles of Union of 1813 , has been flagrantly violated , not only as regards mere verbiage , but also by the practice of that which is inconsistent with our system of morality . On the other , there are those who insist that there has been

neither diversity nor innovation beyond what is pardonable and innocuous , and has been permitted by recognised authority . It is our province , as journalists , to hold our " scale of justice with equal poise , " and whether we please or offend we shall bring to the consideration of this

question a mind perfectly unbiassed by friend or foe , and even " Our Own Correspondent" must not take amiss whatever , in the course of our argument , may not be in accordance with his way of thinking . Nor , on the other hand , should those who cannot agree with our reasonings take

umbrage thereat . As far as we can gather , from a diligent perusal of the book lately published , whilst Ave admit the value and importance of correct ritual , Ave do not find , taking that alone , a sufficient argument for tho , as it were , revolutionizing of the

present arrangements , and if the appeal for the interference of Grand Lodge rests only on the substitution of one method of communicating our traditions for others , which in some particular instances vary only in respect of verbiage , we hardly think that interference will

be accorded . But there may be , and probably there are , other matters connected Avith Lodge working which compel attention and alteration to prevent the groAvth and continuation of much that is , if not improper , still very inconsistent with the "pure and unsullied " system

and the remarks contained in a letter Avhich Ave publish in another column seems to assure us that these do really exist . If so , let them be fairly stated in the proper place for such statements , and we can have no doubt that if shown to be of the importance suggested , they Avill have

their weight in Grand Lodge . They should be , however , of no doubtful nature , and we think it only proper to advise the originator of this movement for " Uniformity " that he will be expected to produce sufficient cause for the inquiry he suggests before he can expect the appointment

of the Committee he asks for . Should he , however , bo enabled to "prove a case , " Ave think that the Craft generally should support his endeavours , and assist in that

work of purification which so many think necessary . To that end , Ave can see no objection to the ultimate formation of the Lodge of Preceptors in the manner proposed , ancl for the purposes stated .

HOUOWA- s OnmrnifT AND PIUS . —For the cure of burns , scalds , wounds and ulcers , this justly celebrated Ointment stands unrivalled . Its balsamic virtues immediately on application , lull the pain and smarting , protect the exposed nerves from the air , give to the vessels the vigour necessary to heal the sore and confer on the blnod a purity which permits it only to lay down healthy flesh in place of that destroyed . Holioway ' s Pills , simultaneously taken , must assist the Ointment ' s purifying and soothing power . Together these medicines act like a charm ; no invalid , after a fair trial , has found them fail to relieve his pain , or completely cure his disease . The combined action of the Ointment and Pills , in all disorders , is too irresistible to bo withstood ,

Correspondence

CORRESPONDENCE

We do not hold ourselves responsible for the opinions of our Cor . respondents . We cannot undertake to return rejected communications . All Letters must bear the name awl address of the Writer , not necessarily for publication , but as a guarantee of good faith .

THE OLD CONCORD LODGE , No . 172 .

To the Editor of THE FREEMASON ' S CHRONICLE . DEAK SIR AND BROTHER , —The W . M . of thia Lodge , Bro . Ganberfc has kindly notified to me that the date of their original warrant ia 14 th April 1768 ; but not having been sufficiently explicit in my inquiries , I have not yet learned at what tavern the Lodge met in the above year . Subject , however , to the further light which an

actual inspection of the warrant may shed npon the transaction , I think the case of this Lodge may be thus summed up : —The original constitution in 1764 must have been a dispensation from the Deputy Grand Master , as was the custom in those days [ and which I propose shortly to illustrate by some excerpts from old Lodge minutes ] . The actual warrant could not have been issued in the usual course , and

being applied for in 1768 , daring the Grand Secretaryship of Bro . French , who only held the office for a single year , it was probably , through the newly-appointed Grand Secretary ' s inexperience , or imperfect knowledge of what had transpired during the tenure of office of his predecessor , Bro . Samuel Spencer , dated at the period of actual signature and issue ? Colour is lent to this supposition from the

fact of the year 1768 being assigned to the Lodge in tho engraved list for 1769 only . It may be added that the description of No . 321 ( 1765-69 ) , viz . : — Pen ' s Coffee House , Castle-street , Leicester . fields , second and fourth Monday , is not only continuous from 1765 to 1769 , but is also identical ( tavern , locality , and day of meeting included ) with that of

No . 349 on the 1770 list . If indeed No . 324 ( 1769 ) is not No . 349 ( 1770 ) then , in racing language—a "double event" has to be explained , viz ., the introduction of a Lodge dated at 1768 , from a numeration ( 1756-69 ) in which it never appeared—and the lapse of another Lodge ( 324 ) in

the same numeration , which not only appeared on all lists from 1765 to 1769 , and was represented in Grand Lodge on 30 th Oct . 1767 , and if erased prior to the change of numbers , such fact would have ^ been recorded in the minutes of Grand Lodge . Yours fraternally ,

23 rd Oct . 1879 . E . F . GOULD

P . S . —Since writing the above , the W . M . of the "OLD CONCORD " has kindly obliged me with the following . — " The No . is 228 , and opened at Pon ' s Coffee TLoaso , Leicester Fields . " The specification of the place of meeting supplies the last link which wns wanting in the chain of connection between the No . 324 of 1769 and the No . 349 of 1770 . The number however [ 228 ] given by Bro . Gaubert is slightly

confusing , as the present OLD CONCOKD Lodgo [ No . 324 , 1769 ; No 349 , 1770 ; and No . 271 , 1781 ] was only placed at 228 at the change of numbers in . 1792 , and save for the assurance of Bros . Gaubert and Gladwell , that the warrant was an original I should havo thought it to have been either a " renewed warrant" or " a warrant of confirmation . "

" UNIFORMITY OIT MASONIC RITUAL AND OBSERVANCE . "

To the Editor of the FREEMASON ' S CHRONICLE . DEAR SIR AND BROTHER , —In a second notice by the Freemason of the above work , and which appeared in last Saturday ' s impression , the writer , after recapitulating facts in connection with ritual , from 1717 to 1813 , with which there are many more than himself thoroughly conversant , makes the following remarks : — " Thus any idea

that before tho Union there was any uniformity of working is alike a chimera and a myth , and subsequently to tho Union the Grand Lodge , by a wise toleration , has allowed—subject to uniformity of landmarks and aporretta—some pardonable and innocuous variations . Any attempt , therefore , to introduce an iron , or rather a leaden , uniformity , can only be productive of grave mischief , as it must inevitably lead to a reign of ' cribs' and ' crams , ' and that greatest of

all curses to Masonry—a printed ritual . As Freemasons , proud of our oral traditions , happy to meet in Lodges of Instruction , under skilful Preceptors , when any one is so rash as to endeavour to raise this needless and inopportune question , we fancy that an overwhelming majority of 'bright' Masons will prove that , uninfluenced by nonsensical bombast , or childish ignorance of the subject , they are determined to ' leave well alone . '"

I wish to answer these remarks , and must ask for space in your columns for that purpose . The main purport of my endeavours is either ignorautly or wilfully misunderstood . I maintain that the solemn Article of Union of 1813 ought to have been religiously preserved and carried out without such toleration of variations , whether " pardonable and innocuous , " as some may consider them , or the

contrary , as many others believe them to be . Theso latter , with myself , are as proud of our oral traditions as any member of our Order can be , and believe them to be fully comprised in the simple and beautiful working of the Emulation Lodge of Improvement , and , further , have no desire to vary the formula of 1813 , whatever that might

have been . Tbe same objection is entertained by them to printed rituals as that so forcibly expressed , although not , perhaps , in the most elegant terms , by lhe writer of the remarks I , in my turn , . criticise . The Grand Lodge has declared " there shall be the most perfect unity of working , " and I will prove , at the proper season , that that declaration is not observed . In the columns of a public journal I

“The Freemason's Chronicle: 1879-11-01, Page 2” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 14 July 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fcn/issues/fcn_01111879/page/2/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
THE PRO GRAND MASTER AT READING. Article 1
CAUTION AND CHARITY. Article 1
UNIFORMITY OF MASONIC RITUAL AND OBSERVANCE. Article 2
CORRESPONDENCE Article 2
SUPREME GRAND CHAPTER OF ROYAL ARCH MASONS OF ENGLAND. Article 3
PRINCE OF WALES LODGE, No. 1705 Article 3
CELEBRATION OF THE 50TH ANNIVERSARY OF THE HERTFORD LODGE. Article 4
COMMITTEE MEETING OF THE GIRLS' SCHOOL. Article 5
PAXTON LODGE, No. 1668. Article 6
In Memoriam. Article 7
Untitled Ad 7
Untitled Ad 7
Untitled Ad 8
Laughton Church Tower Restoration Fund. Article 8
Untitled Ad 8
Untitled Ad 8
Untitled Ad 8
Untitled Ad 8
Untitled Ad 8
Untitled Ad 8
Untitled Ad 8
Untitled Ad 8
Untitled Article 9
CONSECRATION OF THE SIR HUGH MIDDELTON CHAPTER, NO. 1602. Article 9
INSTALLATION MEETING OF THE CASTLE LODGE, No. 1621. Article 9
Old Warrants. Article 9
DIARY FOR THE WEEK Article 10
NOTICES OF MEETINGS Article 11
THE OWL CLUB. Article 13
Untitled Ad 14
THE ROYAL MASONIC PUPILS' ASSISTANCE FUND Article 14
Untitled Ad 15
Untitled Ad 15
Untitled Ad 15
Untitled Ad 15
Untitled Ad 15
Untitled Ad 15
Untitled Ad 15
Untitled Ad 15
Untitled Ad 15
Untitled Ad 15
Untitled Ad 15
Untitled Ad 15
Untitled Ad 15
Untitled Ad 15
Untitled Ad 15
Untitled Ad 16
Untitled Ad 16
Untitled Ad 16
Untitled Ad 16
Untitled Ad 16
Untitled Ad 16
Untitled Ad 16
Untitled Ad 16
Untitled Ad 16
Untitled Ad 16
Untitled Ad 16
Untitled Ad 16
Untitled Ad 16
Untitled Ad 16
Page 1

Page 1

3 Articles
Page 2

Page 2

3 Articles
Page 3

Page 3

3 Articles
Page 4

Page 4

2 Articles
Page 5

Page 5

3 Articles
Page 6

Page 6

2 Articles
Page 7

Page 7

5 Articles
Page 8

Page 8

10 Articles
Page 9

Page 9

5 Articles
Page 10

Page 10

3 Articles
Page 11

Page 11

3 Articles
Page 12

Page 12

2 Articles
Page 13

Page 13

3 Articles
Page 14

Page 14

2 Articles
Page 15

Page 15

15 Articles
Page 16

Page 16

14 Articles
Page 2

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

Caution And Charity.

he can offer without detriment to himself or connections to prevent a repetition of these unkind remarks . In conclusion , we may mention that we are personally anxious to see Bro . Ace released from his present unfortunate condition , and we , therefore , refer our readers to the

letter of Bro . Saunders , which appears in another column , with a request that they will assist in the object Bro . Saunders has in view , —the restoring to Dr . Ace the furniture and other effects of which he has been—we hope but temporarily—deprived .

Uniformity Of Masonic Ritual And Observance.

UNIFORMITY OF MASONIC RITUAL AND OBSERVANCE .

THE publication of a work bearing the above title , by our esteemed correspondent , Bro . James Stevens , appears to have greatly exercised the minds of some members of the Craft , as well as those who were favourable to the movement commenced some years ago , and those who now object to any sort of interference with the present working

of Freemasonry . Doubtless there is much to be said on behalf of each of these parties . It is , nevertheless , none the less necessary , nay , probably , on that very account all essential , that some decision should be arrived at as to what really is meant by the desired " Uniformity . " On the one

hand we have Craftsmen who declare that the " pure and unsullied system , " so forcibly expressed in the Articles of Union of 1813 , has been flagrantly violated , not only as regards mere verbiage , but also by the practice of that which is inconsistent with our system of morality . On the other , there are those who insist that there has been

neither diversity nor innovation beyond what is pardonable and innocuous , and has been permitted by recognised authority . It is our province , as journalists , to hold our " scale of justice with equal poise , " and whether we please or offend we shall bring to the consideration of this

question a mind perfectly unbiassed by friend or foe , and even " Our Own Correspondent" must not take amiss whatever , in the course of our argument , may not be in accordance with his way of thinking . Nor , on the other hand , should those who cannot agree with our reasonings take

umbrage thereat . As far as we can gather , from a diligent perusal of the book lately published , whilst Ave admit the value and importance of correct ritual , Ave do not find , taking that alone , a sufficient argument for tho , as it were , revolutionizing of the

present arrangements , and if the appeal for the interference of Grand Lodge rests only on the substitution of one method of communicating our traditions for others , which in some particular instances vary only in respect of verbiage , we hardly think that interference will

be accorded . But there may be , and probably there are , other matters connected Avith Lodge working which compel attention and alteration to prevent the groAvth and continuation of much that is , if not improper , still very inconsistent with the "pure and unsullied " system

and the remarks contained in a letter Avhich Ave publish in another column seems to assure us that these do really exist . If so , let them be fairly stated in the proper place for such statements , and we can have no doubt that if shown to be of the importance suggested , they Avill have

their weight in Grand Lodge . They should be , however , of no doubtful nature , and we think it only proper to advise the originator of this movement for " Uniformity " that he will be expected to produce sufficient cause for the inquiry he suggests before he can expect the appointment

of the Committee he asks for . Should he , however , bo enabled to "prove a case , " Ave think that the Craft generally should support his endeavours , and assist in that

work of purification which so many think necessary . To that end , Ave can see no objection to the ultimate formation of the Lodge of Preceptors in the manner proposed , ancl for the purposes stated .

HOUOWA- s OnmrnifT AND PIUS . —For the cure of burns , scalds , wounds and ulcers , this justly celebrated Ointment stands unrivalled . Its balsamic virtues immediately on application , lull the pain and smarting , protect the exposed nerves from the air , give to the vessels the vigour necessary to heal the sore and confer on the blnod a purity which permits it only to lay down healthy flesh in place of that destroyed . Holioway ' s Pills , simultaneously taken , must assist the Ointment ' s purifying and soothing power . Together these medicines act like a charm ; no invalid , after a fair trial , has found them fail to relieve his pain , or completely cure his disease . The combined action of the Ointment and Pills , in all disorders , is too irresistible to bo withstood ,

Correspondence

CORRESPONDENCE

We do not hold ourselves responsible for the opinions of our Cor . respondents . We cannot undertake to return rejected communications . All Letters must bear the name awl address of the Writer , not necessarily for publication , but as a guarantee of good faith .

THE OLD CONCORD LODGE , No . 172 .

To the Editor of THE FREEMASON ' S CHRONICLE . DEAK SIR AND BROTHER , —The W . M . of thia Lodge , Bro . Ganberfc has kindly notified to me that the date of their original warrant ia 14 th April 1768 ; but not having been sufficiently explicit in my inquiries , I have not yet learned at what tavern the Lodge met in the above year . Subject , however , to the further light which an

actual inspection of the warrant may shed npon the transaction , I think the case of this Lodge may be thus summed up : —The original constitution in 1764 must have been a dispensation from the Deputy Grand Master , as was the custom in those days [ and which I propose shortly to illustrate by some excerpts from old Lodge minutes ] . The actual warrant could not have been issued in the usual course , and

being applied for in 1768 , daring the Grand Secretaryship of Bro . French , who only held the office for a single year , it was probably , through the newly-appointed Grand Secretary ' s inexperience , or imperfect knowledge of what had transpired during the tenure of office of his predecessor , Bro . Samuel Spencer , dated at the period of actual signature and issue ? Colour is lent to this supposition from the

fact of the year 1768 being assigned to the Lodge in tho engraved list for 1769 only . It may be added that the description of No . 321 ( 1765-69 ) , viz . : — Pen ' s Coffee House , Castle-street , Leicester . fields , second and fourth Monday , is not only continuous from 1765 to 1769 , but is also identical ( tavern , locality , and day of meeting included ) with that of

No . 349 on the 1770 list . If indeed No . 324 ( 1769 ) is not No . 349 ( 1770 ) then , in racing language—a "double event" has to be explained , viz ., the introduction of a Lodge dated at 1768 , from a numeration ( 1756-69 ) in which it never appeared—and the lapse of another Lodge ( 324 ) in

the same numeration , which not only appeared on all lists from 1765 to 1769 , and was represented in Grand Lodge on 30 th Oct . 1767 , and if erased prior to the change of numbers , such fact would have ^ been recorded in the minutes of Grand Lodge . Yours fraternally ,

23 rd Oct . 1879 . E . F . GOULD

P . S . —Since writing the above , the W . M . of the "OLD CONCORD " has kindly obliged me with the following . — " The No . is 228 , and opened at Pon ' s Coffee TLoaso , Leicester Fields . " The specification of the place of meeting supplies the last link which wns wanting in the chain of connection between the No . 324 of 1769 and the No . 349 of 1770 . The number however [ 228 ] given by Bro . Gaubert is slightly

confusing , as the present OLD CONCOKD Lodgo [ No . 324 , 1769 ; No 349 , 1770 ; and No . 271 , 1781 ] was only placed at 228 at the change of numbers in . 1792 , and save for the assurance of Bros . Gaubert and Gladwell , that the warrant was an original I should havo thought it to have been either a " renewed warrant" or " a warrant of confirmation . "

" UNIFORMITY OIT MASONIC RITUAL AND OBSERVANCE . "

To the Editor of the FREEMASON ' S CHRONICLE . DEAR SIR AND BROTHER , —In a second notice by the Freemason of the above work , and which appeared in last Saturday ' s impression , the writer , after recapitulating facts in connection with ritual , from 1717 to 1813 , with which there are many more than himself thoroughly conversant , makes the following remarks : — " Thus any idea

that before tho Union there was any uniformity of working is alike a chimera and a myth , and subsequently to tho Union the Grand Lodge , by a wise toleration , has allowed—subject to uniformity of landmarks and aporretta—some pardonable and innocuous variations . Any attempt , therefore , to introduce an iron , or rather a leaden , uniformity , can only be productive of grave mischief , as it must inevitably lead to a reign of ' cribs' and ' crams , ' and that greatest of

all curses to Masonry—a printed ritual . As Freemasons , proud of our oral traditions , happy to meet in Lodges of Instruction , under skilful Preceptors , when any one is so rash as to endeavour to raise this needless and inopportune question , we fancy that an overwhelming majority of 'bright' Masons will prove that , uninfluenced by nonsensical bombast , or childish ignorance of the subject , they are determined to ' leave well alone . '"

I wish to answer these remarks , and must ask for space in your columns for that purpose . The main purport of my endeavours is either ignorautly or wilfully misunderstood . I maintain that the solemn Article of Union of 1813 ought to have been religiously preserved and carried out without such toleration of variations , whether " pardonable and innocuous , " as some may consider them , or the

contrary , as many others believe them to be . Theso latter , with myself , are as proud of our oral traditions as any member of our Order can be , and believe them to be fully comprised in the simple and beautiful working of the Emulation Lodge of Improvement , and , further , have no desire to vary the formula of 1813 , whatever that might

have been . Tbe same objection is entertained by them to printed rituals as that so forcibly expressed , although not , perhaps , in the most elegant terms , by lhe writer of the remarks I , in my turn , . criticise . The Grand Lodge has declared " there shall be the most perfect unity of working , " and I will prove , at the proper season , that that declaration is not observed . In the columns of a public journal I

  • Prev page
  • 1
  • You're on page2
  • 3
  • 16
  • Next page
  • Accredited Museum Designated Outstanding Collection
  • LIBRARY AND MUSEUM CHARITABLE TRUST OF THE UNITED GRAND LODGE OF ENGLAND REGISTERED CHARITY NUMBER 1058497 / ALL RIGHTS RESERVED © 2025

  • Accessibility statement

  • Designed, developed, and maintained by King's Digital Lab

We use cookies to track usage and preferences.

Privacy & cookie policy