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  • The Freemason's Chronicle
  • April 10, 1875
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  • TYPES OF MASONIC CHARACTER.
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The Freemason's Chronicle, April 10, 1875: Page 2

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The Girls' And Boys' Schools.

with their instruction , as is evidenced by the success of several at the various local examinations recently instituted by the Universities of Oxford and Cambridge . Any one who has read the reports annually presented to the Craft , must have come to the conclusion that the finances of the

School are managed as economically as they are wisely , while , as far as can be ascertained , the subsequent conduct of the children has been a credit to their instructors and

the governors . That this may always be so , and that the Institution may go on increasing in usefulness , and so commend itself more and more to the active support of the Craft , is the wish of every Mason . We must defer our remarks on the Boys' School till a more favourable opportunity presents itself .

Types Of Masonic Character.

TYPES OF MASONIC CHARACTER .

WE have often derived instruction as well as amusement from the study of the varied types of Masonic character which we have met in the course of a long and chequered experience . The study of men indeed is always valuable mental discipline , but as we advance in life it becomes a positive pleasure to note the idiosyncrasies of

those around us . Books do not always retain their power to charm , and he who has been the greatest reader in his youth , frequently finds that his library is little or no solace to him in his later years . But the great book of humanity has an intense fascination for us all . He who has learned

to read men gets his knowledge at first hand , and is in no need of the laboured reflections of the essayist or the feeble attempts at character sketching which abound in modern works of fiction . An elderly man , who knows his Shakspearc , and who looks about him with his own eyes , is sure

to see much that is of the greatest value which escapes the vision of those who have never trained themselves in the art of reading mankind . Our Lodge meetings afford ample scope for studies of this description , and for our own part we would rather read Masons than any other section of the

genus homo . The brethren have their little foibles like other people . We , indeed , have ours , which , no doubt , are conspicuous enough to keen sighted persons , who wag their heads , and hint that so and so is a good follow , but he has his weak points , and then follows a summary of the joints in our harness , which are no doubt numerous enough . Wo

never object to criticism of this kind provided it is not malicious ; our own remarks in this paper , and the articles which may follow it , are prompted by the greatest good feeling . We do not seek to wound , but merely to amuse , or perhaps instruct our readers , who , possibly , may at once

admit the truth of the rough and vague outlines of character which we shall sketch for them . First of all let us notice that Masonic hero who always catches a novice by the button hole and proclaims the marvellous fact , for the hundredth time , that he has been a Mason for twenty years ,

and has never missed a Lodge meeting . Ho is an admirable person ; the sort of man upon whose attendance a Master of a Lodge can always rely ; whatever the condition of the weather may be he is sure to turn up . His familiar face is one of the institutions , so to speak , of the Lodge . You

would miss it as much as the familiar bust or picture which greets your eye the moment you enter the sacred precincts . He is versed in Masonic law this regular attendant ; and carries in bis mind an unbroken tradition of the Lodge history . If he were to miss a single meeting he would lose

he tells you , the thread of the business , and could not readily tell us in what portion of the records a particular fact could be found . As a walking index , and a more or less sound legal adviser he is useful , and although the cynics say that he has never done anything for the Order , we are

prepared to assert that his humble contributions to Masonic prosperity are not to bo despised . A man whose very presence is almost sufficient to keep the Lodge warm is at all events a negatively good Mason . He is never an absentee , he is never in arrear , he never gets out of order .

Some virtues of the positive type would possibly serve to sweeten his character , but all men are not born with genius or endowed with the desire to leave the world better than they found it . Our punctilious Mason is a

good fellow in his way , and we gladly leave him in quiet enjoyment of the glory which may be squeezed out of his regular habits and his deep interest in the mere letter of tbe Craft .

Types Of Masonic Character.

Another type of Mason , whose doings have sorely exercised us , is the man who rushes eagerly after office , but who has not talent enough to fill the post of honour with credit to himself or advantage to the Order . He is one of your dunder-headed men , and can never acquire a perfect

knowledge of his duties . He breaks down lamentably m ceremonial sometimes on critical and solemn occasions . Or in moments when a brilliant flash of genius lights up his mind , and he is disposed to rush glibly along the well-beaten road , some wag puts in an " aside , " and the confident hero

tumbles at once from high heaven to the nether hades . He is commonly a solemn sort of person , and when he speaks you imagine that he is extracting his words from some deep internal reservoir . You scarcely see any movement of the lips , but his low grumbling tones assure you

that the machinery of his mind works through the agency of an intricate arrangement of cog-wheels . With all his faults , however , we like him much better than we do thoso brethren who readily catch the letter of Masonry , but never acquire its spirit ; whose learning is no deeper than the lips ,

and who pour out , parrot-like , their superficial acquirements . Such men are apt to leave a disagreeable impression on the minds of thoughtful young Masons , who leave their glibe mentors with the idea that Masonry after all is a thing of books and formulas , and not a set of principles

which admit of infinite development . Further knowledge of Lodge proceedings soon , no doubt , removes this erroneous impression , bnt it would be better if it had never been produced . High qualifications for office are , no doubt ,

rare , but respectable mediocrity is , or should be , common enough , and great care should be exercised in the choice of brethren to fill prominent positions . If the officers are below par the Lodge suffers in prestige , and consequently in prosperity .

The enthusiastic Mason , whose enthusiasm is like the froth of ginger beer , is not a favourite with us . We value and appreciate enthusiasm of the true sort whenever we meet with it . It is a moral force of the most powerful and subtle kind , and those who possess it have done wonders for

the cause . But our obnoxious enthusiast is all froth ; there is no noble liquor under his creamy head . He takes to this or that subject as the fit seizes him , and never works long enough at any to make a lasting impression . His oratory is of the effervescent kind , and he deals

naturally in well-worn platitudes , which have served again and again to give a dull point to still duller wit . He , however , rapidly reaches his climax . Some rough , but

kindly brother , endowed with a strong tincture of common sense , gives him his first rebuff , and our frothy enthusiast at once sinks into a state of collapse , and disappears for a time from the scene of his labours . Ho now attends but

seldom , and remains a dumb listener for life . Having never learned the English habit of giving and taking , he cannot feel any charity for the brother who so rudel y set him down , but continues to cherish a small animosity , which is decidedly unmasonic . Of course , he would not do his

supposed enemy any harm for the world . But he never applauds his sensible remarks , and votes against him on every occasion . He has had his coup t ? e grace , bnt csvn neither die like a Briton , nor get thoroughly healed of the

wound . His silence is , however , a decided gain to his Lodge , if he could only be brought to think so ; since it is very certain that no institution has ever yet gained any permanent good from noise and froth .

Tbe Mason who never will accept the decision of the majority , is of a type which may occasionally be mot with in most Lodges . He has not learned tho most elementary principles of the art of governing , and fancies that his own inclinations should constitute the only law that should

control his conduct . Ho is the sort of man who will divide again and again upon amotion which must inevitably be carried , and he will do this as long as it is possible to couch amendments in fresh language . He loves fiction , and is always sure , even when he is opposed by a host , that

he must be right . The odd thing about him is that he is never , except by accident , on the side of the majority . If a wrong view of any question is possible he is sure to take it , and he consoles himself for his failure by the trite reflection , that men of genius are always in advance of the

age in which they live . He plumes himself upon being a thinker , upon taking profound and philosophical views of questions which are submitted to his judgment . He is always sailing in the clouds , and be evolves his philosophy as well as his reasons from his inner consciousness . Nothing can be right that he dislikes , nothing can be

“The Freemason's Chronicle: 1875-04-10, Page 2” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 23 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fcn/issues/fcn_10041875/page/2/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
THE INSTALLATION OF H.R.H. THE PRINCE OF WALES. Article 1
THE GIRLS' AND BOYS' SCHOOLS. Article 1
TYPES OF MASONIC CHARACTER. Article 2
EAST, WEST AND SOUTH. Article 3
GREAT QUEEN STREET. Article 4
CAGLIOSTRO. Article 5
SONG. Article 6
REVIEWS. Article 7
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 7
HONOUR ITS OWN REWARD. Article 7
THE THEATRES, &c. Article 8
Untitled Article 8
Untitled Article 8
Untitled Ad 8
Untitled Ad 8
Untitled Article 8
OUR WEEKLY INTELLIGENCE. Article 8
MONEY MARKET AND CITY NEWS. Article 11
DIARY FOR THE WEEK. Article 12
NOTICES OF MEETINGS. Article 12
THE DRAMA. Article 14
RAILWAY TRAFFIC RETURNS. Article 14
Untitled Ad 14
Untitled Ad 15
Untitled Ad 15
Untitled Ad 15
Untitled Ad 15
Untitled Ad 15
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Untitled Ad 16
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

The Girls' And Boys' Schools.

with their instruction , as is evidenced by the success of several at the various local examinations recently instituted by the Universities of Oxford and Cambridge . Any one who has read the reports annually presented to the Craft , must have come to the conclusion that the finances of the

School are managed as economically as they are wisely , while , as far as can be ascertained , the subsequent conduct of the children has been a credit to their instructors and

the governors . That this may always be so , and that the Institution may go on increasing in usefulness , and so commend itself more and more to the active support of the Craft , is the wish of every Mason . We must defer our remarks on the Boys' School till a more favourable opportunity presents itself .

Types Of Masonic Character.

TYPES OF MASONIC CHARACTER .

WE have often derived instruction as well as amusement from the study of the varied types of Masonic character which we have met in the course of a long and chequered experience . The study of men indeed is always valuable mental discipline , but as we advance in life it becomes a positive pleasure to note the idiosyncrasies of

those around us . Books do not always retain their power to charm , and he who has been the greatest reader in his youth , frequently finds that his library is little or no solace to him in his later years . But the great book of humanity has an intense fascination for us all . He who has learned

to read men gets his knowledge at first hand , and is in no need of the laboured reflections of the essayist or the feeble attempts at character sketching which abound in modern works of fiction . An elderly man , who knows his Shakspearc , and who looks about him with his own eyes , is sure

to see much that is of the greatest value which escapes the vision of those who have never trained themselves in the art of reading mankind . Our Lodge meetings afford ample scope for studies of this description , and for our own part we would rather read Masons than any other section of the

genus homo . The brethren have their little foibles like other people . We , indeed , have ours , which , no doubt , are conspicuous enough to keen sighted persons , who wag their heads , and hint that so and so is a good follow , but he has his weak points , and then follows a summary of the joints in our harness , which are no doubt numerous enough . Wo

never object to criticism of this kind provided it is not malicious ; our own remarks in this paper , and the articles which may follow it , are prompted by the greatest good feeling . We do not seek to wound , but merely to amuse , or perhaps instruct our readers , who , possibly , may at once

admit the truth of the rough and vague outlines of character which we shall sketch for them . First of all let us notice that Masonic hero who always catches a novice by the button hole and proclaims the marvellous fact , for the hundredth time , that he has been a Mason for twenty years ,

and has never missed a Lodge meeting . Ho is an admirable person ; the sort of man upon whose attendance a Master of a Lodge can always rely ; whatever the condition of the weather may be he is sure to turn up . His familiar face is one of the institutions , so to speak , of the Lodge . You

would miss it as much as the familiar bust or picture which greets your eye the moment you enter the sacred precincts . He is versed in Masonic law this regular attendant ; and carries in bis mind an unbroken tradition of the Lodge history . If he were to miss a single meeting he would lose

he tells you , the thread of the business , and could not readily tell us in what portion of the records a particular fact could be found . As a walking index , and a more or less sound legal adviser he is useful , and although the cynics say that he has never done anything for the Order , we are

prepared to assert that his humble contributions to Masonic prosperity are not to bo despised . A man whose very presence is almost sufficient to keep the Lodge warm is at all events a negatively good Mason . He is never an absentee , he is never in arrear , he never gets out of order .

Some virtues of the positive type would possibly serve to sweeten his character , but all men are not born with genius or endowed with the desire to leave the world better than they found it . Our punctilious Mason is a

good fellow in his way , and we gladly leave him in quiet enjoyment of the glory which may be squeezed out of his regular habits and his deep interest in the mere letter of tbe Craft .

Types Of Masonic Character.

Another type of Mason , whose doings have sorely exercised us , is the man who rushes eagerly after office , but who has not talent enough to fill the post of honour with credit to himself or advantage to the Order . He is one of your dunder-headed men , and can never acquire a perfect

knowledge of his duties . He breaks down lamentably m ceremonial sometimes on critical and solemn occasions . Or in moments when a brilliant flash of genius lights up his mind , and he is disposed to rush glibly along the well-beaten road , some wag puts in an " aside , " and the confident hero

tumbles at once from high heaven to the nether hades . He is commonly a solemn sort of person , and when he speaks you imagine that he is extracting his words from some deep internal reservoir . You scarcely see any movement of the lips , but his low grumbling tones assure you

that the machinery of his mind works through the agency of an intricate arrangement of cog-wheels . With all his faults , however , we like him much better than we do thoso brethren who readily catch the letter of Masonry , but never acquire its spirit ; whose learning is no deeper than the lips ,

and who pour out , parrot-like , their superficial acquirements . Such men are apt to leave a disagreeable impression on the minds of thoughtful young Masons , who leave their glibe mentors with the idea that Masonry after all is a thing of books and formulas , and not a set of principles

which admit of infinite development . Further knowledge of Lodge proceedings soon , no doubt , removes this erroneous impression , bnt it would be better if it had never been produced . High qualifications for office are , no doubt ,

rare , but respectable mediocrity is , or should be , common enough , and great care should be exercised in the choice of brethren to fill prominent positions . If the officers are below par the Lodge suffers in prestige , and consequently in prosperity .

The enthusiastic Mason , whose enthusiasm is like the froth of ginger beer , is not a favourite with us . We value and appreciate enthusiasm of the true sort whenever we meet with it . It is a moral force of the most powerful and subtle kind , and those who possess it have done wonders for

the cause . But our obnoxious enthusiast is all froth ; there is no noble liquor under his creamy head . He takes to this or that subject as the fit seizes him , and never works long enough at any to make a lasting impression . His oratory is of the effervescent kind , and he deals

naturally in well-worn platitudes , which have served again and again to give a dull point to still duller wit . He , however , rapidly reaches his climax . Some rough , but

kindly brother , endowed with a strong tincture of common sense , gives him his first rebuff , and our frothy enthusiast at once sinks into a state of collapse , and disappears for a time from the scene of his labours . Ho now attends but

seldom , and remains a dumb listener for life . Having never learned the English habit of giving and taking , he cannot feel any charity for the brother who so rudel y set him down , but continues to cherish a small animosity , which is decidedly unmasonic . Of course , he would not do his

supposed enemy any harm for the world . But he never applauds his sensible remarks , and votes against him on every occasion . He has had his coup t ? e grace , bnt csvn neither die like a Briton , nor get thoroughly healed of the

wound . His silence is , however , a decided gain to his Lodge , if he could only be brought to think so ; since it is very certain that no institution has ever yet gained any permanent good from noise and froth .

Tbe Mason who never will accept the decision of the majority , is of a type which may occasionally be mot with in most Lodges . He has not learned tho most elementary principles of the art of governing , and fancies that his own inclinations should constitute the only law that should

control his conduct . Ho is the sort of man who will divide again and again upon amotion which must inevitably be carried , and he will do this as long as it is possible to couch amendments in fresh language . He loves fiction , and is always sure , even when he is opposed by a host , that

he must be right . The odd thing about him is that he is never , except by accident , on the side of the majority . If a wrong view of any question is possible he is sure to take it , and he consoles himself for his failure by the trite reflection , that men of genius are always in advance of the

age in which they live . He plumes himself upon being a thinker , upon taking profound and philosophical views of questions which are submitted to his judgment . He is always sailing in the clouds , and be evolves his philosophy as well as his reasons from his inner consciousness . Nothing can be right that he dislikes , nothing can be

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