Skip to main content
Museum of Freemasonry

Masonic Periodicals Online

  • Explore
  • Advanced Search
  • Home
  • Explore
  • The Freemason's Chronicle
  • Oct. 16, 1875
  • Page 1
  • THE FREEMAN'S JOURNAL AND BISHOP DUPANLOUP'S PAMPHLET.
Current:

The Freemason's Chronicle, Oct. 16, 1875: Page 1

  • Back to The Freemason's Chronicle, Oct. 16, 1875
  • Print image
  • Articles/Ads
    Article THE FREEMAN'S JOURNAL AND BISHOP DUPANLOUP'S PAMPHLET. Page 1 of 2
    Article THE FREEMAN'S JOURNAL AND BISHOP DUPANLOUP'S PAMPHLET. Page 1 of 2 →
Page 1

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

The Freeman's Journal And Bishop Dupanloup's Pamphlet.

THE FREEMAN'S JOURNAL AND BISHOP DUPANLOUP'S PAMPHLET .

THE appearance of an English version of the Bishop of Orleans ' s recent pamphlet against Freemasonry affords the Freeman ' s Journal another opportunity for attacking our Order . We cannot congratulate our contemporary on the achievement of a very brilliant success .

There was nothing new to say , but occasionally it is convenient to traverse the same ground . The " damnable iteration " of the same folly at length assumes , in the eyes of some people , an appearance of wisdom . There are folk who are weak-minded enough to believe that a lie repeated

many times becomes a truth . Therefore it is we do not severely blame the Freeman ' s Journal that , in carrying out its policy of denunciation against us , it should keep on pegging away , for an occasional convert to its views may be the result . But some will ask , Why , then , notice these

attacks ? Well , we have faith in an offensive defence rather than in one that is purely defensive . Having reviewed the tactics of our enemy , we have come to the conclusion

that the mine it is so anxious to explode against us is best met by a counter mine . Our generalship may not commend itself to all , but the line we have adopted appears to us the fittest under all the circumstances . Thus it is we

meet the enemy , boldly instead of spurning him quietly . Whether this policy is superior to all other policies , or , rather , till it is shown that some other policy is more desirable , it is the one we shall follow in all such cases . We have said the Freeman ' s Journal advances no new

arguments in support of its attack on the Craft ; there were none to advance . Wisely , then , has it * contented itself with repeating the stock arguments as to Freemasons being a body of men without religion , and animated by the most profound hatred for all legally constituted

governments . Rather be it said , this organ of Popery says " ditto " to these statements of the Rev . Bishop of Orleans . It endorses , also , another argument , which is decidedly unorig inal on the part of Monsignor Dupanloup , that the

kings and princes , and , generally speaking , the men in high places , who join our Order are studiously kept in ig norance of the real secrets of Masonry . Their presence in our ranks lends an eclat to the Craft which it could not

hope to obtain by any other means . We enrol them accordingly , and initiate them into a few of the more harmless mysteries , but the secrets of the Order , its true aims and purposes , these are sacredly guarded from their knowledge , for this reason : were they known to the royal

and princely Masons , they would fly from us in the greatest horror . All these statements sound well . They have a certain air of plausibility about them , and it is very probable they may seduce thoughtless and weakminded people into believing them . It occurs to us ,

however , to ask , in the first instance , is a man who has most grossly perjured himself exactly the kind of man whose -ipse dixit we accept unreservedly . Masonry is not obligatory upon anybody . They only enter who seek entrance of their own free will and accord . Some of those who bind

themselves to guard certain secrets , in due time , and to serve their own foul ends , divulge them to others . Is it in accordance with reason or common sense that such men should be accepted as truthful exponents of the secrets of

Masonry . Had they bound themselves to secresy under some overwhelming sense of fear , or as the only means of escape from some dreadful calamity , the world would to a certain extent absolve them from the crime of perjury . But

The Freeman's Journal And Bishop Dupanloup's Pamphlet.

they voluntarily bound themselves to accept a certain obligation , and in the most shameless manner they break faith . Would the evidence of such a person carry weight with it in any court of law ? It is possible , of course , that a liar may for once in his life speak the truth , but the worst of being

a liar is that one ' s word is never accepted . The testimony of a man who has deliberately forsworn himself is worthless , even were his evidence true . It is the reverse of creditable to the Bishop of Orleans ' s common sense and his knowledge of the world that he should attach the slightest

value to the statements of men who have lied in the open day . But there may be concurrent testimony . Where ? Why , in the rituals . But a published ritual that contained all or any of the secrets of Masonry is as direct and flagrant a violation of Masonic law as an oral statement of

our secrets . Only a dishonourable man would dream of putting pen to paper and describing what he has bound himself not to reveal . Thus the rituals which the Bishop has become possessed of , even if they contained the secrets of Masonry , are as worthless as the oral testimony of the

perjurer . Again , certain of our customs are described as being silly . Admitting , for the sake of argument , the accuracy of the description , we bear in mind what a certain poet of old has said : —Dulce est desipere in loco . Horace , heathen as he was , had evidently studied human kind to

greater advantage than our French ultramontane prelate of the nineteenth century . Allowing that a table napkin is called a banner , a knife a sword , a glass a cannon , and that toasts are drunk as described by the Bishop , what after all is there but a little harmless folly , as far removed

from atheism and politicalplottings and conspiracies as is the North from the South Pole . We fancy if the Bishop were at a Scottish banquet and saw the toast of the evening drunk with the full honours , he would smile a smile of pity , if not of contempt , that grown men should comport

themselves so strangely . Yet a true Scot thinks it no sin to show his enthusiasm in the manner prescribed of custom in his country . The cynic may urge that a " Kentish fire , " is an act of lunacy , that to drink a toast with musical honours is directly opposed to the dictates of common

sense . We recal what Horace said , " It is pleasant occasionally to make a fool of oneself , " and contentedly abandon the cynic to his cynicism . Then as to the various ceremonies of initiation as described by the Bishop . There are one or two passages in his account which justify us in

believing that his reverence must have been studying the pages of Verdant Green , and has taken for solemn fact what the author of that exceedingly funny book intended only as a good joke . The next time the Bishop Contemplates writing a pamphlet against Freemasonry , let him

invest in a French version of the late Captain Marryatt ' s PercivalKesne . He will find in it a most interesting and , as a matter of course , a most authentic account of how is given the sign by which Freemasons make themselves known to each other by day , at all events , if not by night .

We need not dwell , however , on what the Bishop regards as the ludicrous aspect of Masonry . We have our customs , and some of them may strike the non-Mason as being extremely silly , but everynation under the sun has certain customs , and each looks upon the other ' s customs as more

or less ridiculous . What is sacred with one people is unholy in the sight of other people , nor has the Bishop any greater right to laugh at Masonic ceremonials , supposing him to have formed a right conception of their nature , than a Mahommedan or Hindu has to ridicule the rites and ceremonies of the Christian Church . However , the climax of absurdity is reached when the Bishop proceeds to show

“The Freemason's Chronicle: 1875-10-16, Page 1” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 26 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fcn/issues/fcn_16101875/page/1/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
THE FREEMAN'S JOURNAL AND BISHOP DUPANLOUP'S PAMPHLET. Article 1
BOYS' AND GIRLS' SCHOOLS. Article 2
THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE GRAND ORIENT OF FRANCE. Article 3
FREEMASONRY AND RELIGION. Article 3
OUR CHARITIES. Article 4
PROVINCIAL GRAND LODGE OF CUMBERLAND AND WESTMORLAND. Article 4
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 5
REVIEWS. Article 6
NOTICES OF MEETINGS. Article 7
Untitled Ad 8
Untitled Ad 8
Untitled Ad 8
Untitled Ad 8
Untitled Ad 8
Untitled Article 8
OUR WEEKLY BUDGET. Article 8
THE DRAMA. Article 10
ANSWERS TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 10
DIARY FOR THE WEEK. Article 11
NOTICES OF MEETINGS, Article 11
Untitled Ad 14
Untitled Ad 14
Untitled Ad 14
Untitled Ad 14
Untitled Ad 14
Untitled Ad 14
Untitled Ad 14
Untitled Ad 14
Untitled Ad 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 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

3 Articles
Page 4

Page 4

3 Articles
Page 5

Page 5

2 Articles
Page 6

Page 6

2 Articles
Page 7

Page 7

2 Articles
Page 8

Page 8

7 Articles
Page 9

Page 9

2 Articles
Page 10

Page 10

3 Articles
Page 11

Page 11

3 Articles
Page 12

Page 12

2 Articles
Page 13

Page 13

2 Articles
Page 14

Page 14

9 Articles
Page 15

Page 15

11 Articles
Page 16

Page 16

14 Articles
Page 1

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

The Freeman's Journal And Bishop Dupanloup's Pamphlet.

THE FREEMAN'S JOURNAL AND BISHOP DUPANLOUP'S PAMPHLET .

THE appearance of an English version of the Bishop of Orleans ' s recent pamphlet against Freemasonry affords the Freeman ' s Journal another opportunity for attacking our Order . We cannot congratulate our contemporary on the achievement of a very brilliant success .

There was nothing new to say , but occasionally it is convenient to traverse the same ground . The " damnable iteration " of the same folly at length assumes , in the eyes of some people , an appearance of wisdom . There are folk who are weak-minded enough to believe that a lie repeated

many times becomes a truth . Therefore it is we do not severely blame the Freeman ' s Journal that , in carrying out its policy of denunciation against us , it should keep on pegging away , for an occasional convert to its views may be the result . But some will ask , Why , then , notice these

attacks ? Well , we have faith in an offensive defence rather than in one that is purely defensive . Having reviewed the tactics of our enemy , we have come to the conclusion

that the mine it is so anxious to explode against us is best met by a counter mine . Our generalship may not commend itself to all , but the line we have adopted appears to us the fittest under all the circumstances . Thus it is we

meet the enemy , boldly instead of spurning him quietly . Whether this policy is superior to all other policies , or , rather , till it is shown that some other policy is more desirable , it is the one we shall follow in all such cases . We have said the Freeman ' s Journal advances no new

arguments in support of its attack on the Craft ; there were none to advance . Wisely , then , has it * contented itself with repeating the stock arguments as to Freemasons being a body of men without religion , and animated by the most profound hatred for all legally constituted

governments . Rather be it said , this organ of Popery says " ditto " to these statements of the Rev . Bishop of Orleans . It endorses , also , another argument , which is decidedly unorig inal on the part of Monsignor Dupanloup , that the

kings and princes , and , generally speaking , the men in high places , who join our Order are studiously kept in ig norance of the real secrets of Masonry . Their presence in our ranks lends an eclat to the Craft which it could not

hope to obtain by any other means . We enrol them accordingly , and initiate them into a few of the more harmless mysteries , but the secrets of the Order , its true aims and purposes , these are sacredly guarded from their knowledge , for this reason : were they known to the royal

and princely Masons , they would fly from us in the greatest horror . All these statements sound well . They have a certain air of plausibility about them , and it is very probable they may seduce thoughtless and weakminded people into believing them . It occurs to us ,

however , to ask , in the first instance , is a man who has most grossly perjured himself exactly the kind of man whose -ipse dixit we accept unreservedly . Masonry is not obligatory upon anybody . They only enter who seek entrance of their own free will and accord . Some of those who bind

themselves to guard certain secrets , in due time , and to serve their own foul ends , divulge them to others . Is it in accordance with reason or common sense that such men should be accepted as truthful exponents of the secrets of

Masonry . Had they bound themselves to secresy under some overwhelming sense of fear , or as the only means of escape from some dreadful calamity , the world would to a certain extent absolve them from the crime of perjury . But

The Freeman's Journal And Bishop Dupanloup's Pamphlet.

they voluntarily bound themselves to accept a certain obligation , and in the most shameless manner they break faith . Would the evidence of such a person carry weight with it in any court of law ? It is possible , of course , that a liar may for once in his life speak the truth , but the worst of being

a liar is that one ' s word is never accepted . The testimony of a man who has deliberately forsworn himself is worthless , even were his evidence true . It is the reverse of creditable to the Bishop of Orleans ' s common sense and his knowledge of the world that he should attach the slightest

value to the statements of men who have lied in the open day . But there may be concurrent testimony . Where ? Why , in the rituals . But a published ritual that contained all or any of the secrets of Masonry is as direct and flagrant a violation of Masonic law as an oral statement of

our secrets . Only a dishonourable man would dream of putting pen to paper and describing what he has bound himself not to reveal . Thus the rituals which the Bishop has become possessed of , even if they contained the secrets of Masonry , are as worthless as the oral testimony of the

perjurer . Again , certain of our customs are described as being silly . Admitting , for the sake of argument , the accuracy of the description , we bear in mind what a certain poet of old has said : —Dulce est desipere in loco . Horace , heathen as he was , had evidently studied human kind to

greater advantage than our French ultramontane prelate of the nineteenth century . Allowing that a table napkin is called a banner , a knife a sword , a glass a cannon , and that toasts are drunk as described by the Bishop , what after all is there but a little harmless folly , as far removed

from atheism and politicalplottings and conspiracies as is the North from the South Pole . We fancy if the Bishop were at a Scottish banquet and saw the toast of the evening drunk with the full honours , he would smile a smile of pity , if not of contempt , that grown men should comport

themselves so strangely . Yet a true Scot thinks it no sin to show his enthusiasm in the manner prescribed of custom in his country . The cynic may urge that a " Kentish fire , " is an act of lunacy , that to drink a toast with musical honours is directly opposed to the dictates of common

sense . We recal what Horace said , " It is pleasant occasionally to make a fool of oneself , " and contentedly abandon the cynic to his cynicism . Then as to the various ceremonies of initiation as described by the Bishop . There are one or two passages in his account which justify us in

believing that his reverence must have been studying the pages of Verdant Green , and has taken for solemn fact what the author of that exceedingly funny book intended only as a good joke . The next time the Bishop Contemplates writing a pamphlet against Freemasonry , let him

invest in a French version of the late Captain Marryatt ' s PercivalKesne . He will find in it a most interesting and , as a matter of course , a most authentic account of how is given the sign by which Freemasons make themselves known to each other by day , at all events , if not by night .

We need not dwell , however , on what the Bishop regards as the ludicrous aspect of Masonry . We have our customs , and some of them may strike the non-Mason as being extremely silly , but everynation under the sun has certain customs , and each looks upon the other ' s customs as more

or less ridiculous . What is sacred with one people is unholy in the sight of other people , nor has the Bishop any greater right to laugh at Masonic ceremonials , supposing him to have formed a right conception of their nature , than a Mahommedan or Hindu has to ridicule the rites and ceremonies of the Christian Church . However , the climax of absurdity is reached when the Bishop proceeds to show

  • Prev page
  • You're on page1
  • 2
  • 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