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  • Jan. 16, 1875
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  • CITIZENSHIP OF THE WORLD.
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The Freemason's Chronicle, Jan. 16, 1875: Page 1

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    Article A ROYAL MASONIC BENEVOLENT INSTITUTION FOR SCOTLAND. Page 1 of 1
    Article A ROYAL MASONIC BENEVOLENT INSTITUTION FOR SCOTLAND. Page 1 of 1
    Article CITIZENSHIP OF THE WORLD. Page 1 of 2 →
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

A Royal Masonic Benevolent Institution For Scotland.

A ROYAL MASONIC BENEVOLENT INSTITUTION FOR SCOTLAND .

IN our opening number we referred , at length , to tho benefits conferred by the Royal Masonic Benevolent Institution , and likewise to its progress , present position , and future prospects . We also expressed our intention of treating , in a somewhat similar manner , the other Masonic Institutions—the maintenance of which is due to the energy

and goodwill of the general body of Masons—to wit , the Royal Masonic Institutions for Boys and Girls respectively . It is , then , with a feeling of genuine pleasure that wo announce to our readers that a plan is under consideration amonor our Scottish Brethren for the establishment of a

Royal Scottish Masonic Benevolent Institution . We have received a prospectus , in which are briefly set forth the objects it is sought to attain thereby ; and a proposed code of rules and regulations for the governance of the Institution when established , together with a very stirring appeal

from Bro . Geo . R . Harriott , Prov . G . M . Wigtown and Kirkcudbright , the originator and promoter of the scheme . We doubt not the appeal will meet with that attention which the excellent character of the proposal merits . Equally confident are we that Scottish Masons will not be

behind their brethren m other parts of the United Kingdom in promoting and fostering an Institution whose objects are the relief of aged and distressed Masons and their widows , and the education of the sons and daughters of poor , yet deserving brothers .

- It is to be regretted , and may , perhaps , bo matter for no little wonderment with many people , that Scotch Masonry should possess no public fund , asylum , or institution for the general purposes of benevolence . Scotchmen are intensely national , not from mere sentiment only , but

from pure love of country . Even in the most remote lands —and Scotsmen aro to bo found all over tho world—they never forget their native hills and glens , but retain always the liveliest recollection of their exceeding beauty . Tho clanship of olden time still exists , but on a wider basis ;

where were many clans , with much and mutual rivalry , there is now , so to speak , but one clan , —the whole nation , Hence , we repeat , the surprise which many will experience

that Scotch Masonry should be without some such institution as tho Royal Masonic Benevolent Institution , though we are convinced that Scotch Lodges and individual members of the Brotherhood have not been found wanting

in the grandest of all Masonic duties—Charity . The object of tho present proposal is a large—Ave may almost say , a too ambitious—one , being none other than the establishment of an institution which shall unite in itself the aims of our threo Masonic Charities . To this

no sound objection can bo raised , so far as its mere government is concerned , but the promoters of the scheme must first get their institution before they lay down plans for its supervision and direction . And the question will naturally occur to every one , —May there not be shipwreck of the

whole scheme if its aim be too extensive ? True , the promoters have , in a measure , anticipated this objection , by limiting the proposal , at first starting , to renting a " house at one of the Universities , as a College Hall on a small scale , say for 10 or 15 students . " After allowing

amply for the cost of this experiment , it is calculated thero would still be a balance left for general management and for annuities to a limited number of widows and aged brethren . Yet we submit , -with all deference , that it would bo far better and far likelier to succeed if the project were , in the first instance , limited to one purpose only , leaving

A Royal Masonic Benevolent Institution For Scotland.

the other objects to be gradually engrafted on the earlier one , as the ability of the Institution to extend its field of operations became more assured . Again , we would suggest that the relief of aged and distressed Masons and their widows is a matter of graver importance than the training

of youth , especially in Scotland , where the system of education is supei'ior to our own , and the rudiments of knowledge are within easy reach of all classes of the

community . But , after all , these aro merely suggestions , thrown out , not in a spirit of carping criticism , but with the earnest desire to aid the promoters in the attainment of their object .

Nothing need be said as to the geneal character of the proposal , which will necessarily command the attention of Scottish Masons . Nor do wc anticipate any backwardness on the part of . the latter in supporting the project . Once let it be shown that the establishment of such an institution

is feasible , and its maintenance in a flourishing condition , is , humanly speaking , assured , while we are confident Scotch Masons will do their duty . Nor is it needful to say much on the present occasion respecting the rules and regulations of the proposed Institution . They are conceived in a just

spirit , with a due regard for its proper governance . But these rules are liable to amendment when the scheme has reached maturity . We may remark , however , that , as far as we have been ablo to institute any comparison , the proposed rules embody all the chief points laid down

in tho laws and regulations of our Royal Masonic Benevolent Institution , and our Royal Masonic Institutions for Boys and Girls respectively . They have evidently been prepared with tho utmost care by one or more persons , who , if not possessing experience in tho

management of such institutions , show themselves herein to be thoroughly competent for such a task . So carefully , indeed , have these laws and regulations been drawn , so excellent is the spirit in which they have been conceived , that we question much if any material alteration would bo required .

It only remains for us to add , that we wish every success to the scheme , and that as far as any efforts of our own may be of service to the promoters , we shall most willingly render them such aid as it may be in our power to afford . On all occasions our columns will be open to them for the furtherance of this most admirablo project .

Citizenship Of The World.

CITIZENSHIP OF THE WORLD .

"AS wide as the earth ; as deep as the human heart . " _ LJL . This is the ideal that some young and enthusiastic minds form of a cosmopolitanism which shall embrace the great human family . Many a man has aspired to be an apostle of cosmopolitanism . The great traveller , or the

lounger , who ha 3 sauntered through every capital of Europe , may imagine that because he has seen many countries , or men of many nations , that he is therefore qualified to teach us the true principles of international

toleration , or rather citizenship . Culture and refinement may , indeed , gain by the labours of such men as these ; but it often happens that the traveller is a man of narrow ideas , who has gone through the world incapable of justly

estimating the facts presented to his mind , while the lounger , who hangs about tho saloons of fashion , often knows nothing of men outside his own sphere . Citizenship of the world was indeed a dream of the young England party a generation ago , and it is rather odd that the gallant

“The Freemason's Chronicle: 1875-01-16, Page 1” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 1 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fcn/issues/fcn_16011875/page/1/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
A ROYAL MASONIC BENEVOLENT INSTITUTION FOR SCOTLAND. Article 1
CITIZENSHIP OF THE WORLD. Article 1
HOMES AND EDUCATION. Article 2
A MAN AND A BROTHER. Article 3
MASONIC RENCONTRES — THE TWO ISTHMUS. Article 4
REVIEWS. Article 6
LITERATURE. Article 7
ROYAL MASONIC INSTITUTION FOR BOYS. Article 7
THE THEATRES, &c. Article 8
Untitled Article 8
Untitled Article 8
Untitled Article 8
HOME QUESTIONS. Article 8
ANSWERS TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 10
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 10
WHAT THE WORLD THINKS OF US. Article 10
MASONIC HONOUR AT FUNERALS. Article 11
MONEY MARKET AND CITY NEWS. Article 11
RAILWAY TRAFFIC RETURNS. Article 11
DIARY FOR THE WEEK. Article 12
NOTICES OF MEETINGS. Article 12
THE DRAMA. Article 13
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

A Royal Masonic Benevolent Institution For Scotland.

A ROYAL MASONIC BENEVOLENT INSTITUTION FOR SCOTLAND .

IN our opening number we referred , at length , to tho benefits conferred by the Royal Masonic Benevolent Institution , and likewise to its progress , present position , and future prospects . We also expressed our intention of treating , in a somewhat similar manner , the other Masonic Institutions—the maintenance of which is due to the energy

and goodwill of the general body of Masons—to wit , the Royal Masonic Institutions for Boys and Girls respectively . It is , then , with a feeling of genuine pleasure that wo announce to our readers that a plan is under consideration amonor our Scottish Brethren for the establishment of a

Royal Scottish Masonic Benevolent Institution . We have received a prospectus , in which are briefly set forth the objects it is sought to attain thereby ; and a proposed code of rules and regulations for the governance of the Institution when established , together with a very stirring appeal

from Bro . Geo . R . Harriott , Prov . G . M . Wigtown and Kirkcudbright , the originator and promoter of the scheme . We doubt not the appeal will meet with that attention which the excellent character of the proposal merits . Equally confident are we that Scottish Masons will not be

behind their brethren m other parts of the United Kingdom in promoting and fostering an Institution whose objects are the relief of aged and distressed Masons and their widows , and the education of the sons and daughters of poor , yet deserving brothers .

- It is to be regretted , and may , perhaps , bo matter for no little wonderment with many people , that Scotch Masonry should possess no public fund , asylum , or institution for the general purposes of benevolence . Scotchmen are intensely national , not from mere sentiment only , but

from pure love of country . Even in the most remote lands —and Scotsmen aro to bo found all over tho world—they never forget their native hills and glens , but retain always the liveliest recollection of their exceeding beauty . Tho clanship of olden time still exists , but on a wider basis ;

where were many clans , with much and mutual rivalry , there is now , so to speak , but one clan , —the whole nation , Hence , we repeat , the surprise which many will experience

that Scotch Masonry should be without some such institution as tho Royal Masonic Benevolent Institution , though we are convinced that Scotch Lodges and individual members of the Brotherhood have not been found wanting

in the grandest of all Masonic duties—Charity . The object of tho present proposal is a large—Ave may almost say , a too ambitious—one , being none other than the establishment of an institution which shall unite in itself the aims of our threo Masonic Charities . To this

no sound objection can bo raised , so far as its mere government is concerned , but the promoters of the scheme must first get their institution before they lay down plans for its supervision and direction . And the question will naturally occur to every one , —May there not be shipwreck of the

whole scheme if its aim be too extensive ? True , the promoters have , in a measure , anticipated this objection , by limiting the proposal , at first starting , to renting a " house at one of the Universities , as a College Hall on a small scale , say for 10 or 15 students . " After allowing

amply for the cost of this experiment , it is calculated thero would still be a balance left for general management and for annuities to a limited number of widows and aged brethren . Yet we submit , -with all deference , that it would bo far better and far likelier to succeed if the project were , in the first instance , limited to one purpose only , leaving

A Royal Masonic Benevolent Institution For Scotland.

the other objects to be gradually engrafted on the earlier one , as the ability of the Institution to extend its field of operations became more assured . Again , we would suggest that the relief of aged and distressed Masons and their widows is a matter of graver importance than the training

of youth , especially in Scotland , where the system of education is supei'ior to our own , and the rudiments of knowledge are within easy reach of all classes of the

community . But , after all , these aro merely suggestions , thrown out , not in a spirit of carping criticism , but with the earnest desire to aid the promoters in the attainment of their object .

Nothing need be said as to the geneal character of the proposal , which will necessarily command the attention of Scottish Masons . Nor do wc anticipate any backwardness on the part of . the latter in supporting the project . Once let it be shown that the establishment of such an institution

is feasible , and its maintenance in a flourishing condition , is , humanly speaking , assured , while we are confident Scotch Masons will do their duty . Nor is it needful to say much on the present occasion respecting the rules and regulations of the proposed Institution . They are conceived in a just

spirit , with a due regard for its proper governance . But these rules are liable to amendment when the scheme has reached maturity . We may remark , however , that , as far as we have been ablo to institute any comparison , the proposed rules embody all the chief points laid down

in tho laws and regulations of our Royal Masonic Benevolent Institution , and our Royal Masonic Institutions for Boys and Girls respectively . They have evidently been prepared with tho utmost care by one or more persons , who , if not possessing experience in tho

management of such institutions , show themselves herein to be thoroughly competent for such a task . So carefully , indeed , have these laws and regulations been drawn , so excellent is the spirit in which they have been conceived , that we question much if any material alteration would bo required .

It only remains for us to add , that we wish every success to the scheme , and that as far as any efforts of our own may be of service to the promoters , we shall most willingly render them such aid as it may be in our power to afford . On all occasions our columns will be open to them for the furtherance of this most admirablo project .

Citizenship Of The World.

CITIZENSHIP OF THE WORLD .

"AS wide as the earth ; as deep as the human heart . " _ LJL . This is the ideal that some young and enthusiastic minds form of a cosmopolitanism which shall embrace the great human family . Many a man has aspired to be an apostle of cosmopolitanism . The great traveller , or the

lounger , who ha 3 sauntered through every capital of Europe , may imagine that because he has seen many countries , or men of many nations , that he is therefore qualified to teach us the true principles of international

toleration , or rather citizenship . Culture and refinement may , indeed , gain by the labours of such men as these ; but it often happens that the traveller is a man of narrow ideas , who has gone through the world incapable of justly

estimating the facts presented to his mind , while the lounger , who hangs about tho saloons of fashion , often knows nothing of men outside his own sphere . Citizenship of the world was indeed a dream of the young England party a generation ago , and it is rather odd that the gallant

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