Skip to main content
Museum of Freemasonry

Masonic Periodicals Online

  • Explore
  • Advanced Search
  • Home
  • Explore
  • The Freemason's Chronicle
  • Oct. 4, 1879
  • Page 4
  • CORRESPONDENCE.
Current:

The Freemason's Chronicle, Oct. 4, 1879: Page 4

  • Back to The Freemason's Chronicle, Oct. 4, 1879
  • Print image
  • Articles/Ads
    Article CORRESPONDENCE. Page 1 of 1
    Article CORRESPONDENCE. Page 1 of 1
    Article BRO. PATRICK AND THE STINGY LODGE. Page 1 of 1
Page 4

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

Correspondence.

CORRESPONDENCE .

We do not hold ourselves responsible for the opinions of our Correspondents . We cannot undertake to return rejected communications . All Letters must hear the name anl address of the Writer , not necessarily for pi'Mication , but as a guarantee of good faith .

PUPILS' ASSISTANCE FUND ,

To the Editor of THE FREEMASON ' S CHRONICLE . DEAK SIR AND BROTHER , —The Royal Masonic Pupils' Assistance Fund , to which your columns have lately given duo prominence , is one which I am sure has only to be widely known to enlist the usual hearty support of the Craft to so deserving an undertaking . And

whilst the subject is being fully discussed , allow me to furnish one grain of fact , which may , I trust , cany tho weight which the old proverb ascribes to ifc . I know of one of the pupils of the Girls' School , who , having completed her term of instruction in the Institution , now finds herself ,

for want of a suitable situation where she could do herself and hor training full justice , compelled to rely for support upon her widowed mother , until sho can ( failing anything better ) obtain a situation as a domestic servant . Now I think , Sir , that this is ono of tho instances , occasionally recurring , where a little assistance from the proposed fund , judiciously applied at the outset of an ex-pupil ' s career , and

when the gifts and attainments of tho pupil are best understood , that could not fail of being most beneficial , and would be productive of results in consonance with the loyal support previously given to our deceased brethren ' s children , and gratifying to thoso who have the welfare of our Masonic pupils afc heart . I enclose card , and shall be happy to furnish full particulars .

I remain , Dear Sir and Brother , Fraternally yours , VEUAX ,

A PROMINENT MEMBER AT INSTRUCTION LODGES .

To the Editor of the FBEEMASON ' S CHRONICLE . DEAR SIR AND BROTHER , —I think a very good opportunity now presents itself to pay a well merited compliment to a brother who has for some years devoted a great part of his leisure to the advancement of Masonic knowledge ; and if you , Brother Editor , will

kindly insert this letter , I hope some practical result may follow . It is , doubtless , known to many London Masons that Bro . C . H . Webb , whoso services are so often in request at the various Lodges of Instruction , of which he is either Preceptor or member , has taken iu hand tho case of Mary Ann Amelia AVyatt , who is a candidate for the Girls' School ; and I think if those brethren

who havo votes to spare would send them to him , he would look upon ifc as a most gratifying testimonial . I am afraid to detail the merits of the case , as I know you are averse , and justly so , fco any display of partiality in your columns ; but I think the fact of this child being left , together with three others , without either parent , is sufficient to warrant tho interest Bro . AVebb has shown in the

case . Thanking you in anticipation , I remain , Yours , & c . A PUPIL

[ AVe are pleased to accede to the wish of our brother , and hope , as he suggests , that his remarks will be followed by a hearty response . We will gladly forward any votes sent to us for the child of our deceased Bro . AVyatt . —ED , F . C . I

FREEMASONS PAINTED BY ONE OF THEMSELVES .

To the Editor of Tin : FREEMASON ' S CHRONICLE . DEAR SIR AND BROTHER , —I am glad to seo that tho attention of the Craft has been called by your correspondent " P . M . " to the uncharitable sentiments contained in an editorial article in yonr contemporary of tho 20 th ultimo . "P . M . " is not the only brother who has perceived this want of charitable feeling , aud whether the

article was or was not written by the editor himself , ho is , at all events , answerable for having allowed it to pass into t ype . I hope that under the very heavy pressure of literary matter which falls on that brother ' s shoulders the evil influence of such an article accidentally escaped his attention , for I can hardly believe that such an experienced Mason would wilfully have desired to advertise any

foibles which Masons in common with tho outer world possess . And with this remark I dismiss consideration of the article referred to . But I would remind the Craffc to whom it is addressed that , whether Masons or not , the great human family seem naturally to lose sin-fat of the fact that they themselves have the weaknesses which they

discover iu others . To-day is published The Masonic Magazine for October , and in it I find an article entitled , " Notes on Literature , Science , and Art , " with the author ' s name in full , and a list of five works of which ho is also the author , and an " & c ., & c . " appended to that list , winding up with what is virtually a condemnation of tlie pleasure Masons experience at seeing their names in print . Referring

Correspondence.

to Bro . Fabien s account in your contemporary of the initiation of a Frenchman in tho basket of the great balloon of Paris , he says , "Bro . Fabien's commnnieation is much more interesting than the dull and dreary lists of names of members present at a Lodgo , with which so many reports aro sadly overloaded . If it be necessary , as I confess I fear it is , to minister a little to the vanity of Masons to

entice them to read a Masonic periodical , I , for one , had rather risk my neck in a balloon than herd safely on the solid earth with those un-Masonic Masons . " Every month this brother ' s " Notes " appear in tho Masoni : Magazine , with his name , literary achievements , and residence fully advertised . Now I do not blame him at all for so placing himself before the public ; but I think that he , as much as any one , should not discover vanity in other brethren who like their

Masonio friends to see that they have been attending to their Masonic duties . I have no reason to be ashamed of my own name , and I am nofc ashamed of having passed the chair , but as I might if I signed tho former be identified , and consequently come within our brother ' s condemnation , I shall avoid tho possibility of being identified by subscribing myself , ANOTHER P . M . 1 st Octoher ISId .

To the Editor of the FREEMASON s CHRONICLE . DEAR SIK AND BROTHER , —Although I agree with the principle of the letter by P . M . in your last week's issue , about the bad taste of a Masonic paper publishing to tho outside world a rather unfortunate but true fact thafc brethren often do not act up to tho tenets of

Freemasonry outside the Lodge , and often occupy exalted positions therein , where , had their proper characters been known , they should never have been admitted into tho Craft , still we aro taught in such a case to observe silence , and perhaps it would have been better had this been done in this instance . At the same time there is a great

deal of truth in the writer ' s remarks , and if they have tho effect of moving some of our brethren to be more particular iu the admission of members , it would be of vast benefit to the fair character of Freemasonry in general . In some parts of the Continent a candidate is obliged to send his photograph , which is exhibited in the

outer room of the Lodge , for a long period , so as to give every member a chance to fully recognise the person wishing to join ; besides , a full inquiry into his character is made by the proposer and seconder . AVore a similar plan adopted here , we should not be in the too frequent position of having Members and Officers , even W . M . ' s , whose presence in a Lodge is objectionable and anomalous .

I remain , Dear Sir and Brother , Yours fraternally , A PAST MASTER AND P . Z

Bro. Patrick And The Stingy Lodge.

BRO . PATRICK AND THE STINGY LODGE .

rpHERE was once upon a timo an exceedingly mean and stingy J- Lodge , that was scarce ever known to do any thing for charity . All its money was either expended for banquets aud for the various paraphernalia of conferring the degrees , or was loaned around to various members of the Lodge , somo of whom paid neither principal nor interest .

Ono evening Bro . Patrick Fitzsimmons brought in an appeal for two widows , both in great distress . One was the widow of a Mason , who had died suspended for non-payment of dues ; the other the widow of a very worthy citizen who was not a Mason at all . After Pat had stated his case , and the matter had been argued both pro and con , but principally con , the case of each was put to vote . The first

case was voted down , on the plea that the woman ' s husband was not a Mason iu good standing ; the other was next voted down , on the ground that tho woman ' s husband was not not a Mason , though a very worthy man . This aroused the Irish of Bro . Pat , who was a warm-hearted son of old Erin , and who knew very well that the

reason why the Lodge voted down each appeal was because it was stingy , and had no true Masonic charity . Boiling over with feeling , Pat arose and addressed the AVorshipful Master in the following strain : " AVorshipful Blaster , this Lodge puts me very much in mind of an old Irish anecdote :

" Thero was a Bishop in Dublin who engaged a paiuther to make a large picture for the Cathaydral . The subject chosen was tho crossing of the Red Say by the Israelites . After a shuteable time the picture was complayted and hung in the Cathadral , covered with a broad and heavy curtain . A great crowd of people had collected to see tbe picture unvceled . The priests entered in procession , the

organ sounded and the singers sung . All faces were tinned in anxious expectation to the great curtain . AVhen it was drawn aside nothing could be seen but a vast expanse of wather—reddish-green wather . Tho Bishop in great rage turned to the painther and said : ' I thought I asked you to paint a picture of the Israelites crossing the Red Say ?'

Thrue for you ! that s just it , ' said the painther . ' Bnfc where are the Israelites ? ' asked the indignant Bishop ' They ' re gone over , ' said the painther . ' Well , but where are the pursuing Egyptians ?' ' They ' re gone under , ' said the painther .

'And now A \ orshipful and brethren , it sames about so wid ye here . If I ax ye to help a Mason ' s widow ye say : ' he ' s gone over , ' nnd if I ax ye to help a widow of another man , ye say : ' he ' s gone under , ' and betwixt them ye jist give nothing ct all ! ' " Masonic Review .

“The Freemason's Chronicle: 1879-10-04, Page 4” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 4 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fcn/issues/fcn_04101879/page/4/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
THE APPROACHING SCHOOL ELECTIONS. Article 1
GO TO WORK IN EARNEST. Article 2
FREEMASONRY IN LANCASHIRE. Article 3
MADAME WORRELL'S ANNUAL CONCERT Article 3
PROVINCIAL GRAND CHAPTER OF STAFFORDSHIRE. Article 3
THE SAINT ELMO LODGE OF ROYAL ARK MARINERS. Article 3
BEAUDESERT LODGE, LEIGHTON BUZZARD. Article 3
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 4
BRO. PATRICK AND THE STINGY LODGE. Article 4
KNIGHTS' TEMPLARY IN CORNWALL. Article 5
ORDER OF THE RED CROSS OF CONSTANTLNE. Article 5
INSTALLATION MEETINGS, &c. Article 6
ROYAL ALFRED LODGE, No. 780. Article 6
ROTHESAY LODGE, No. 1687. Article 7
Royal Masonic Institution For Girls 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 Ad 8
THE GRAND ORIENT OF FRANCE BEFORE THE CRAFT UNIVERSAL. Article 8
MARRIAGE. Article 10
TESTIMONIAL TO BRO. EDWIN WILLIAMS. Article 10
DIARY FOR THE WEEK Article 11
NOTICE OF MEETINGS Article 12
THE ROYAL MASONIC PUPILS' ASSISTANCE FUND Article 14
Untitled 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 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

2 Articles
Page 2

Page 2

3 Articles
Page 3

Page 3

7 Articles
Page 4

Page 4

3 Articles
Page 5

Page 5

3 Articles
Page 6

Page 6

2 Articles
Page 7

Page 7

3 Articles
Page 8

Page 8

11 Articles
Page 9

Page 9

2 Articles
Page 10

Page 10

3 Articles
Page 11

Page 11

2 Articles
Page 12

Page 12

3 Articles
Page 13

Page 13

2 Articles
Page 14

Page 14

3 Articles
Page 15

Page 15

16 Articles
Page 16

Page 16

14 Articles
Page 4

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

Correspondence.

CORRESPONDENCE .

We do not hold ourselves responsible for the opinions of our Correspondents . We cannot undertake to return rejected communications . All Letters must hear the name anl address of the Writer , not necessarily for pi'Mication , but as a guarantee of good faith .

PUPILS' ASSISTANCE FUND ,

To the Editor of THE FREEMASON ' S CHRONICLE . DEAK SIR AND BROTHER , —The Royal Masonic Pupils' Assistance Fund , to which your columns have lately given duo prominence , is one which I am sure has only to be widely known to enlist the usual hearty support of the Craft to so deserving an undertaking . And

whilst the subject is being fully discussed , allow me to furnish one grain of fact , which may , I trust , cany tho weight which the old proverb ascribes to ifc . I know of one of the pupils of the Girls' School , who , having completed her term of instruction in the Institution , now finds herself ,

for want of a suitable situation where she could do herself and hor training full justice , compelled to rely for support upon her widowed mother , until sho can ( failing anything better ) obtain a situation as a domestic servant . Now I think , Sir , that this is ono of tho instances , occasionally recurring , where a little assistance from the proposed fund , judiciously applied at the outset of an ex-pupil ' s career , and

when the gifts and attainments of tho pupil are best understood , that could not fail of being most beneficial , and would be productive of results in consonance with the loyal support previously given to our deceased brethren ' s children , and gratifying to thoso who have the welfare of our Masonic pupils afc heart . I enclose card , and shall be happy to furnish full particulars .

I remain , Dear Sir and Brother , Fraternally yours , VEUAX ,

A PROMINENT MEMBER AT INSTRUCTION LODGES .

To the Editor of the FBEEMASON ' S CHRONICLE . DEAR SIR AND BROTHER , —I think a very good opportunity now presents itself to pay a well merited compliment to a brother who has for some years devoted a great part of his leisure to the advancement of Masonic knowledge ; and if you , Brother Editor , will

kindly insert this letter , I hope some practical result may follow . It is , doubtless , known to many London Masons that Bro . C . H . Webb , whoso services are so often in request at the various Lodges of Instruction , of which he is either Preceptor or member , has taken iu hand tho case of Mary Ann Amelia AVyatt , who is a candidate for the Girls' School ; and I think if those brethren

who havo votes to spare would send them to him , he would look upon ifc as a most gratifying testimonial . I am afraid to detail the merits of the case , as I know you are averse , and justly so , fco any display of partiality in your columns ; but I think the fact of this child being left , together with three others , without either parent , is sufficient to warrant tho interest Bro . AVebb has shown in the

case . Thanking you in anticipation , I remain , Yours , & c . A PUPIL

[ AVe are pleased to accede to the wish of our brother , and hope , as he suggests , that his remarks will be followed by a hearty response . We will gladly forward any votes sent to us for the child of our deceased Bro . AVyatt . —ED , F . C . I

FREEMASONS PAINTED BY ONE OF THEMSELVES .

To the Editor of Tin : FREEMASON ' S CHRONICLE . DEAR SIR AND BROTHER , —I am glad to seo that tho attention of the Craft has been called by your correspondent " P . M . " to the uncharitable sentiments contained in an editorial article in yonr contemporary of tho 20 th ultimo . "P . M . " is not the only brother who has perceived this want of charitable feeling , aud whether the

article was or was not written by the editor himself , ho is , at all events , answerable for having allowed it to pass into t ype . I hope that under the very heavy pressure of literary matter which falls on that brother ' s shoulders the evil influence of such an article accidentally escaped his attention , for I can hardly believe that such an experienced Mason would wilfully have desired to advertise any

foibles which Masons in common with tho outer world possess . And with this remark I dismiss consideration of the article referred to . But I would remind the Craffc to whom it is addressed that , whether Masons or not , the great human family seem naturally to lose sin-fat of the fact that they themselves have the weaknesses which they

discover iu others . To-day is published The Masonic Magazine for October , and in it I find an article entitled , " Notes on Literature , Science , and Art , " with the author ' s name in full , and a list of five works of which ho is also the author , and an " & c ., & c . " appended to that list , winding up with what is virtually a condemnation of tlie pleasure Masons experience at seeing their names in print . Referring

Correspondence.

to Bro . Fabien s account in your contemporary of the initiation of a Frenchman in tho basket of the great balloon of Paris , he says , "Bro . Fabien's commnnieation is much more interesting than the dull and dreary lists of names of members present at a Lodgo , with which so many reports aro sadly overloaded . If it be necessary , as I confess I fear it is , to minister a little to the vanity of Masons to

entice them to read a Masonic periodical , I , for one , had rather risk my neck in a balloon than herd safely on the solid earth with those un-Masonic Masons . " Every month this brother ' s " Notes " appear in tho Masoni : Magazine , with his name , literary achievements , and residence fully advertised . Now I do not blame him at all for so placing himself before the public ; but I think that he , as much as any one , should not discover vanity in other brethren who like their

Masonio friends to see that they have been attending to their Masonic duties . I have no reason to be ashamed of my own name , and I am nofc ashamed of having passed the chair , but as I might if I signed tho former be identified , and consequently come within our brother ' s condemnation , I shall avoid tho possibility of being identified by subscribing myself , ANOTHER P . M . 1 st Octoher ISId .

To the Editor of the FREEMASON s CHRONICLE . DEAR SIK AND BROTHER , —Although I agree with the principle of the letter by P . M . in your last week's issue , about the bad taste of a Masonic paper publishing to tho outside world a rather unfortunate but true fact thafc brethren often do not act up to tho tenets of

Freemasonry outside the Lodge , and often occupy exalted positions therein , where , had their proper characters been known , they should never have been admitted into tho Craft , still we aro taught in such a case to observe silence , and perhaps it would have been better had this been done in this instance . At the same time there is a great

deal of truth in the writer ' s remarks , and if they have tho effect of moving some of our brethren to be more particular iu the admission of members , it would be of vast benefit to the fair character of Freemasonry in general . In some parts of the Continent a candidate is obliged to send his photograph , which is exhibited in the

outer room of the Lodge , for a long period , so as to give every member a chance to fully recognise the person wishing to join ; besides , a full inquiry into his character is made by the proposer and seconder . AVore a similar plan adopted here , we should not be in the too frequent position of having Members and Officers , even W . M . ' s , whose presence in a Lodge is objectionable and anomalous .

I remain , Dear Sir and Brother , Yours fraternally , A PAST MASTER AND P . Z

Bro. Patrick And The Stingy Lodge.

BRO . PATRICK AND THE STINGY LODGE .

rpHERE was once upon a timo an exceedingly mean and stingy J- Lodge , that was scarce ever known to do any thing for charity . All its money was either expended for banquets aud for the various paraphernalia of conferring the degrees , or was loaned around to various members of the Lodge , somo of whom paid neither principal nor interest .

Ono evening Bro . Patrick Fitzsimmons brought in an appeal for two widows , both in great distress . One was the widow of a Mason , who had died suspended for non-payment of dues ; the other the widow of a very worthy citizen who was not a Mason at all . After Pat had stated his case , and the matter had been argued both pro and con , but principally con , the case of each was put to vote . The first

case was voted down , on the plea that the woman ' s husband was not a Mason iu good standing ; the other was next voted down , on the ground that tho woman ' s husband was not not a Mason , though a very worthy man . This aroused the Irish of Bro . Pat , who was a warm-hearted son of old Erin , and who knew very well that the

reason why the Lodge voted down each appeal was because it was stingy , and had no true Masonic charity . Boiling over with feeling , Pat arose and addressed the AVorshipful Master in the following strain : " AVorshipful Blaster , this Lodge puts me very much in mind of an old Irish anecdote :

" Thero was a Bishop in Dublin who engaged a paiuther to make a large picture for the Cathaydral . The subject chosen was tho crossing of the Red Say by the Israelites . After a shuteable time the picture was complayted and hung in the Cathadral , covered with a broad and heavy curtain . A great crowd of people had collected to see tbe picture unvceled . The priests entered in procession , the

organ sounded and the singers sung . All faces were tinned in anxious expectation to the great curtain . AVhen it was drawn aside nothing could be seen but a vast expanse of wather—reddish-green wather . Tho Bishop in great rage turned to the painther and said : ' I thought I asked you to paint a picture of the Israelites crossing the Red Say ?'

Thrue for you ! that s just it , ' said the painther . ' Bnfc where are the Israelites ? ' asked the indignant Bishop ' They ' re gone over , ' said the painther . ' Well , but where are the pursuing Egyptians ?' ' They ' re gone under , ' said the painther .

'And now A \ orshipful and brethren , it sames about so wid ye here . If I ax ye to help a Mason ' s widow ye say : ' he ' s gone over , ' nnd if I ax ye to help a widow of another man , ye say : ' he ' s gone under , ' and betwixt them ye jist give nothing ct all ! ' " Masonic Review .

  • Prev page
  • 1
  • 3
  • You're on page4
  • 5
  • 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