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  • The Freemason's Chronicle
  • June 24, 1876
  • Page 6
  • LODGE REPORTS.
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The Freemason's Chronicle, June 24, 1876: Page 6

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Correspondence.

published afc Frankfort in 1748 . Now , as you aro aware , tho authenticity of this MS . is rejected , the fact of Leland having ever seen a copy of it is doubted , and the statement of its publication at Frankfort in 1748 is denied . Tho week following the appearance of your article , yonr contemporary published a leader bearing the title I havo given to this letter , " Tho Perpetuation of Masonic Error . " In

it the Masonic scribe , whoever he may have been , took yon roundly to task for your exceeding simplicity in attaching any value whatever to this unfortunate MS . and its history , real or fictitious , as the case may bo . Your contemporary observed that the " averment , " that the date of tho MS . in question was practically 1445 , " on the part of a Masonic Avriter in 187 G , " was , " as Talleyrand said of a mistake ,

' worse than a crime . It Avas " an insult practically to tho critical studies of our period , " ifc Avas " in itself absolutely incorrect and unhistorical from beginning to end , " and demonstrated that your " Masonic scribe , Avhoevor he may be , " had " not mastered the first rudiments of Masonic archaeology . " It proceeded : " In Germany such a remarkable assertion will bo simply laughed at . Indeed , we

havo never seen moro errors in a short statement . Now I havo no intention of entering the lists against you or your contemporary . I may remark , however , there is no very violent improbability , and nothing that outrages common sense , in the averment that Henry VI . signed the MS ., that Leland saw a copy of it , and that it Avas recopied and published in 1748 at Frankfort . All

this may never havo taken place , and your assertions may be Avorthy of the ridicule so plentifully heaped npon them . This , however , concerns me not at this moment . I read your leader and your contemporary ' s , and if I am not sufficiently bewildered between the pair of you , it is my misfortune , perhaps , but certainly not my fault . Judge , however , of my surprise , when I read , a few days back , in the

columns of yonr contemporary , tho following statement , apropos of a part of Bro . Havers ' s motion . " St . Alban is , in all our legends , identi - fied inseparably Avith the first effort of our operative Order , and all our later Masonic MSS ., from tho 16 th century at any rate , mention St . Alban and tho provincial Verulamium . " If your " averment " about tho MS . referred to ivas worthy of so severe a condemnation .

what shall be said of your contemporary s " averment about the inseparable identification of St . Alban " Aviththe first effort of our operative Order . " I imagine " tho first effort of onr operative Order " must havo been the erection of a mud-cabin or some similar protection against the weather . Tho first effort I have read about is the city that Avas built by Cain's son Enoch , as mentioned in an early

chapter of Genesis . Bnt this happened before the Deluge , ancl I think St . Alban can have had nothing to clo Avith that : there is no evidence , at least , that ho had . The Tower of Babel is a later effort of the operative Masons , but even that Avas built considerably over two thousand years before tho Christian era , Avhereas St . Alban flourished towards the end of tho third century after it . A still later effort of

tho operative Mason was the building of King Solomon ' s Temple , but I Avas not aAvaro that the Avise King of Israel and onr British proto-martyr to Christianity Avere contemporaries . If I confine my attention to Britain , I find among the earliest efforts of our operative Order the erection of a chain of forts by Agricola , to keep in check tho northern barbarians , then the building of Adrian ' s Avail , and then

came that of Sevcrus , bnt all these were anterior to St . Alban ' s time . If 1 narrow tho circle of my inquiries to St . Alban himself , I am abio to learn that he lived in the reign of Diocletian , and that ho was put to death for his attachment to Christianity , but tho year of his death is variously stated . As regards the Abbey which bears his name , that Avas built in Saxon times , a few centuries after his martyrdom ,

I presume , by operative Masons , but I see nothing in that to identify St . Alban with " our operative Order . " I wish I could . A few such interesting fables might be worked up into a very readable volume , and would create almost as much excitement in onr nurseries as ever did tho stories of Mothers Hubbard and Goose . But " all our later MS ., from the l ( 5 th century at any rate , mention

St . Alban and Verulamium . " Now thou , we read , " That great and intercsting cathedral contains mementoes both of Alban and Amphibalas , and no history of our operative forefathers can be complete without recognition of the early connection of Alban with the operative guilds . " It comes to this , then . Alban is mentioned in a number of MSS . of comparatively recent origin , and having a greater or

less value . Therefore , no histoiy , & e . is complete without mention of his connection Avith tho operative guilds . No histoiy of Some is held to bo complete which omits the story of Romulus and Senilis being suckled by a wolf , but no sane man believes the story , and certainly no sane man now-a-days would dream of presenting £ 1 , 000 to the shrine of Mars merely because histoiy recorded such au

absurdity . Centuries hence people may be erecting monuments to the sea-serpent , because its frequent appearance during tho season of "big gooseberries" is mentioned in "the daily papers . " Of this epoch there always havo been and always will be a number of simple folk ready to believe anything thoy havo had told them or seen in print or MS . I have no objection to include St . Alban , Euclid , Pythagoras , King Solomon , Noah , and , if need be , Adam ,

among the Grand Masters ol our Order , whether operative or speculative , hut I fchall only do so iu tho nursery . If the Germain ; have been laughing at your " averment" about the MS ., & c , & c , what Avill I . hey do about this absurd rigmarole Avhich your contemporary lias now served up to its readers ? Fraternally yours , "Q . "

Masonic Portraits.

MASONIC PORTRAITS .

To the Editor of THE FREEMASON ' S CHRONICLE . DEAR SIR AND BROTHER , —Through tho diaphonous scumble of your Masonic Portrait in a recent number of the FREEMASON ' S CHRONICLE , entitled " A Shining Light , " one cannot fail to recognise a generally faithful transcript of the worthy Secretary of tho Frederick

Lodge of Unity , Bro . Magnus Ohren , P . P . G . J . W . But there is one error in it , and as this called forth some animadversions from our excellent Treasurer on the occasion of tho last meeting of tho Lodgo , I take the liberty of putting a touch or two to tho Portrait . Tho Lodge has never been resuscitated , for the simple reason that ifc has never been moribund . To Bro . Magnus Ohren it is much indebted , not only for important services rendered in his official capacity , but also for tho

introduction of a largo number of men of high intelligence and good social position . At no period of the history of the Frederick Lodgo has there been any want of vitality . Bro . Ohren has therefore increased its prosperity , augmented its numbers , but there never Avas in tho Lodgo any symptom of decay . Apologising for trespassing on your space , I remain , yours truly and fraternally , H . E . FRANCES , P . P . G . S . D ., D . C . 452 .

Lodge Reports.

LODGE REPORTS .

To the Editor of THE FREEMASON ' S CHRONICLE . DEAR SIR AND BROTHER , —In an editorial in a late number of your Masonic contemporary attention is called to tho manner in Avhich Lodgo proceedings are made public . About a year ago I endeavoured , through tho medium of the FREEMASON ' S CHRONICLE , to impress upon reporters tho necessity of caution , and the importance

of keeping within the veil . Details , however apparently insignificant in themselves , might nevertheless tend to tho betrayal of matters which should be carefully and jealously guarded . I Avas glad to perceive that in many cases the hint was acted upon . There was a marked improvement in the style of the reports . They were conspicuous by tho absence of " over publication of detail , uninteresting

repetition of common place and well-known Eitual formularies " which the writer of the article alluded to points out as dangerous . Of late , however , the tendency to over-communicativeness has assumed somo of its former proportions . We are far from observing obligatory reserve , and too frequently from being guided by common and extremely necessary prudence . Turning to the reports in the same

publication , I find them replete with the evil which is so strongly deprecated . They might veiy advantageously be modified . We aro not justified , neither is it consistent with the tenor of our Masonic duties , in presenting to the outer Avorld a vivid and minutely defined picture of the mode in which the ceremonials of the various degrees are conducted . To tho initiated the barest statement of the names

of those who had passed through the ordeal of any of the ceremonials is amply sufficient , as the method of procedure is quite as familiar to the reader as- to the Avriter , and tho recital thereof therefore entirely superfluous . Not only is the prevalent enstom to particularise injudicious , useless and unnecessary , but , as experience teaches , very often injurious . A shrewd impostor , perusing Masonic

records as they appear from week to week , could easily gather sufficient knowledge of the routine of the Lodge room to succeed in his pursuit of deception , ancl , if possessed of plausible and insinuating address , would } have no great difficulty so far to hoodwink tho incautious ancl careless as to penetrate into tho Lodgo itself . As one of

the resnlts of this laxity , Avhich cannot be too strongly deprecated and condemned , AVO havo periodical complaints of tricks played upon the unwary , ancl of successful deceit , Avhich diverts charity from its legitimate course into the pockets of tho trickster , whoso audacity and vicious acuteness enables him to transmit the flimsiest materials

into current coin of the realm . Without any desire to dictate or censure brethren who from a sense of duty take the trouble to forlvard reports , I would exhort them to exercise greater care , and ceaso to travel in such fearfully dangerous proximity to tho boundaries of our landmarks , bearing in mind the ease with which , in an unguarded moment , they might be overstepped . Information intended solely

for the Masonic public can be , with but little effort , so wrapped up as to bo perfectly intelligible to those interested and remain profoundly mysterious to the rest of the Avorld . There are numerous incidents iuthe course of a Masonic meeting in Lodge which , without much harm , might perhaps be openly discussed . But if reports wero chiefly restricted to tho proceedings of what is understood to

constitute the fourth degree , although not quite so instructive , they Avould bo devoid of danger , and most probably prove much more interesting and often more amusing to tho general reader . It is for the conductors of a Masonic publication , upon whom , after all , tho weight of responsibility rests , to omit all objectionable matter , and expunge statements likely to lead to over-publicity . There is always a class of individuals on tip-too of expectation to catch their fellows tripping , and ready to

turn tho follies of others to their own profit and advantage . As Masons , AVC aro stricly bound to reticence , and to perform our appointed tasks with that silence and circumspection which has always been deemed essential to the very existence of tho Order . Ifc Avere bettor to suppress publicity altogether than bring discredit upon ourselves by furnishing matter for gossip , and possibly , though perhaps unwittingly , violate our obligations . Yours fraternally , E . GOTTHEIL .

Old Warrants.

OLD WARRANTS .

To the Editor of THE FREEMASON ' S CHRONICLE . DEAR SIR AND BROTHER , —Tho following from Burke ' s rccragcovd Baronetage ( Ed . 18 ( 34 ) , setting forth tho titles , & c . of the Dukes of Vthole and a few particulars respecting the two Avho wero Grand

Masters of " Ancients , " will donbtless interest your readers , and especially Bro . Constable . Athole , Duke , Marquess , aud Earl of ( Sir George Augustus Frederick John Murray K . T . ) , Marquess and Earl of Tullibardine , Earl of Stratbiay and Strathardale , Viscount Glenalmond , Balquhidar , and

“The Freemason's Chronicle: 1876-06-24, Page 6” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 25 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fcn/issues/fcn_24061876/page/6/.
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Title Category Page
THE LATEST THEORY ABOUT MASONIC CHARITY. Article 1
MASONIC PORTRAITS (No. 33). A SOLDIER OP FORTUNE. Article 2
GRAND LODGE OF INDIANA. Article 3
THE BOYS' SCHOOL. Article 3
Obituary. Article 3
REPORT ON FOREIGN CORRESPONDENCE. Article 4
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 5
THE PERPETUATION OF MASONIC ERROR. Article 5
MASONIC PORTRAITS. Article 6
LODGE REPORTS. Article 6
OLD WARRANTS. Article 6
FREEMASONRY IN NORTH WALES. LLANIDLOES AND NEWTOWN. Article 7
PROVINCIAL GRAND LODGE OF OXFORDSHIRE. Article 7
Untitled Ad 8
Untitled Ad 8
Untitled Ad 8
Untitled Ad 8
Untitled Article 8
OUR THIRD VOLUME. Article 8
OUR WEEKLY BUDGET. Article 8
Old Warrants. —No. 4. Article 9
FREEMASONRY IN IRELAND. Article 9
ANTIENT AND PRIMITIVE MASONRY. TABLES OF THE LAW OF THE FREEMASONS. Article 10
DISTRICT GRAND LODGE, PUNJAB. Article 10
MASONIC HALL, LAUNCESTON. LAYING THE FOUNDATION STONE. Article 11
GRAND LODGE OF LINCOLNSHIRE. Article 11
TEE DRAMA. Article 11
DIARY FOR THE WEEK. Article 12
NOTICES OF MEETINGS. Article 12
Untitled Ad 15
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Correspondence.

published afc Frankfort in 1748 . Now , as you aro aware , tho authenticity of this MS . is rejected , the fact of Leland having ever seen a copy of it is doubted , and the statement of its publication at Frankfort in 1748 is denied . Tho week following the appearance of your article , yonr contemporary published a leader bearing the title I havo given to this letter , " Tho Perpetuation of Masonic Error . " In

it the Masonic scribe , whoever he may have been , took yon roundly to task for your exceeding simplicity in attaching any value whatever to this unfortunate MS . and its history , real or fictitious , as the case may bo . Your contemporary observed that the " averment , " that the date of tho MS . in question was practically 1445 , " on the part of a Masonic Avriter in 187 G , " was , " as Talleyrand said of a mistake ,

' worse than a crime . It Avas " an insult practically to tho critical studies of our period , " ifc Avas " in itself absolutely incorrect and unhistorical from beginning to end , " and demonstrated that your " Masonic scribe , Avhoevor he may be , " had " not mastered the first rudiments of Masonic archaeology . " It proceeded : " In Germany such a remarkable assertion will bo simply laughed at . Indeed , we

havo never seen moro errors in a short statement . Now I havo no intention of entering the lists against you or your contemporary . I may remark , however , there is no very violent improbability , and nothing that outrages common sense , in the averment that Henry VI . signed the MS ., that Leland saw a copy of it , and that it Avas recopied and published in 1748 at Frankfort . All

this may never havo taken place , and your assertions may be Avorthy of the ridicule so plentifully heaped npon them . This , however , concerns me not at this moment . I read your leader and your contemporary ' s , and if I am not sufficiently bewildered between the pair of you , it is my misfortune , perhaps , but certainly not my fault . Judge , however , of my surprise , when I read , a few days back , in the

columns of yonr contemporary , tho following statement , apropos of a part of Bro . Havers ' s motion . " St . Alban is , in all our legends , identi - fied inseparably Avith the first effort of our operative Order , and all our later Masonic MSS ., from tho 16 th century at any rate , mention St . Alban and tho provincial Verulamium . " If your " averment " about tho MS . referred to ivas worthy of so severe a condemnation .

what shall be said of your contemporary s " averment about the inseparable identification of St . Alban " Aviththe first effort of our operative Order . " I imagine " tho first effort of onr operative Order " must havo been the erection of a mud-cabin or some similar protection against the weather . Tho first effort I have read about is the city that Avas built by Cain's son Enoch , as mentioned in an early

chapter of Genesis . Bnt this happened before the Deluge , ancl I think St . Alban can have had nothing to clo Avith that : there is no evidence , at least , that ho had . The Tower of Babel is a later effort of the operative Masons , but even that Avas built considerably over two thousand years before tho Christian era , Avhereas St . Alban flourished towards the end of tho third century after it . A still later effort of

tho operative Mason was the building of King Solomon ' s Temple , but I Avas not aAvaro that the Avise King of Israel and onr British proto-martyr to Christianity Avere contemporaries . If I confine my attention to Britain , I find among the earliest efforts of our operative Order the erection of a chain of forts by Agricola , to keep in check tho northern barbarians , then the building of Adrian ' s Avail , and then

came that of Sevcrus , bnt all these were anterior to St . Alban ' s time . If 1 narrow tho circle of my inquiries to St . Alban himself , I am abio to learn that he lived in the reign of Diocletian , and that ho was put to death for his attachment to Christianity , but tho year of his death is variously stated . As regards the Abbey which bears his name , that Avas built in Saxon times , a few centuries after his martyrdom ,

I presume , by operative Masons , but I see nothing in that to identify St . Alban with " our operative Order . " I wish I could . A few such interesting fables might be worked up into a very readable volume , and would create almost as much excitement in onr nurseries as ever did tho stories of Mothers Hubbard and Goose . But " all our later MS ., from the l ( 5 th century at any rate , mention

St . Alban and Verulamium . " Now thou , we read , " That great and intercsting cathedral contains mementoes both of Alban and Amphibalas , and no history of our operative forefathers can be complete without recognition of the early connection of Alban with the operative guilds . " It comes to this , then . Alban is mentioned in a number of MSS . of comparatively recent origin , and having a greater or

less value . Therefore , no histoiy , & e . is complete without mention of his connection Avith tho operative guilds . No histoiy of Some is held to bo complete which omits the story of Romulus and Senilis being suckled by a wolf , but no sane man believes the story , and certainly no sane man now-a-days would dream of presenting £ 1 , 000 to the shrine of Mars merely because histoiy recorded such au

absurdity . Centuries hence people may be erecting monuments to the sea-serpent , because its frequent appearance during tho season of "big gooseberries" is mentioned in "the daily papers . " Of this epoch there always havo been and always will be a number of simple folk ready to believe anything thoy havo had told them or seen in print or MS . I have no objection to include St . Alban , Euclid , Pythagoras , King Solomon , Noah , and , if need be , Adam ,

among the Grand Masters ol our Order , whether operative or speculative , hut I fchall only do so iu tho nursery . If the Germain ; have been laughing at your " averment" about the MS ., & c , & c , what Avill I . hey do about this absurd rigmarole Avhich your contemporary lias now served up to its readers ? Fraternally yours , "Q . "

Masonic Portraits.

MASONIC PORTRAITS .

To the Editor of THE FREEMASON ' S CHRONICLE . DEAR SIR AND BROTHER , —Through tho diaphonous scumble of your Masonic Portrait in a recent number of the FREEMASON ' S CHRONICLE , entitled " A Shining Light , " one cannot fail to recognise a generally faithful transcript of the worthy Secretary of tho Frederick

Lodge of Unity , Bro . Magnus Ohren , P . P . G . J . W . But there is one error in it , and as this called forth some animadversions from our excellent Treasurer on the occasion of tho last meeting of tho Lodgo , I take the liberty of putting a touch or two to tho Portrait . Tho Lodge has never been resuscitated , for the simple reason that ifc has never been moribund . To Bro . Magnus Ohren it is much indebted , not only for important services rendered in his official capacity , but also for tho

introduction of a largo number of men of high intelligence and good social position . At no period of the history of the Frederick Lodgo has there been any want of vitality . Bro . Ohren has therefore increased its prosperity , augmented its numbers , but there never Avas in tho Lodgo any symptom of decay . Apologising for trespassing on your space , I remain , yours truly and fraternally , H . E . FRANCES , P . P . G . S . D ., D . C . 452 .

Lodge Reports.

LODGE REPORTS .

To the Editor of THE FREEMASON ' S CHRONICLE . DEAR SIR AND BROTHER , —In an editorial in a late number of your Masonic contemporary attention is called to tho manner in Avhich Lodgo proceedings are made public . About a year ago I endeavoured , through tho medium of the FREEMASON ' S CHRONICLE , to impress upon reporters tho necessity of caution , and the importance

of keeping within the veil . Details , however apparently insignificant in themselves , might nevertheless tend to tho betrayal of matters which should be carefully and jealously guarded . I Avas glad to perceive that in many cases the hint was acted upon . There was a marked improvement in the style of the reports . They were conspicuous by tho absence of " over publication of detail , uninteresting

repetition of common place and well-known Eitual formularies " which the writer of the article alluded to points out as dangerous . Of late , however , the tendency to over-communicativeness has assumed somo of its former proportions . We are far from observing obligatory reserve , and too frequently from being guided by common and extremely necessary prudence . Turning to the reports in the same

publication , I find them replete with the evil which is so strongly deprecated . They might veiy advantageously be modified . We aro not justified , neither is it consistent with the tenor of our Masonic duties , in presenting to the outer Avorld a vivid and minutely defined picture of the mode in which the ceremonials of the various degrees are conducted . To tho initiated the barest statement of the names

of those who had passed through the ordeal of any of the ceremonials is amply sufficient , as the method of procedure is quite as familiar to the reader as- to the Avriter , and tho recital thereof therefore entirely superfluous . Not only is the prevalent enstom to particularise injudicious , useless and unnecessary , but , as experience teaches , very often injurious . A shrewd impostor , perusing Masonic

records as they appear from week to week , could easily gather sufficient knowledge of the routine of the Lodge room to succeed in his pursuit of deception , ancl , if possessed of plausible and insinuating address , would } have no great difficulty so far to hoodwink tho incautious ancl careless as to penetrate into tho Lodgo itself . As one of

the resnlts of this laxity , Avhich cannot be too strongly deprecated and condemned , AVO havo periodical complaints of tricks played upon the unwary , ancl of successful deceit , Avhich diverts charity from its legitimate course into the pockets of tho trickster , whoso audacity and vicious acuteness enables him to transmit the flimsiest materials

into current coin of the realm . Without any desire to dictate or censure brethren who from a sense of duty take the trouble to forlvard reports , I would exhort them to exercise greater care , and ceaso to travel in such fearfully dangerous proximity to tho boundaries of our landmarks , bearing in mind the ease with which , in an unguarded moment , they might be overstepped . Information intended solely

for the Masonic public can be , with but little effort , so wrapped up as to bo perfectly intelligible to those interested and remain profoundly mysterious to the rest of the Avorld . There are numerous incidents iuthe course of a Masonic meeting in Lodge which , without much harm , might perhaps be openly discussed . But if reports wero chiefly restricted to tho proceedings of what is understood to

constitute the fourth degree , although not quite so instructive , they Avould bo devoid of danger , and most probably prove much more interesting and often more amusing to tho general reader . It is for the conductors of a Masonic publication , upon whom , after all , tho weight of responsibility rests , to omit all objectionable matter , and expunge statements likely to lead to over-publicity . There is always a class of individuals on tip-too of expectation to catch their fellows tripping , and ready to

turn tho follies of others to their own profit and advantage . As Masons , AVC aro stricly bound to reticence , and to perform our appointed tasks with that silence and circumspection which has always been deemed essential to the very existence of tho Order . Ifc Avere bettor to suppress publicity altogether than bring discredit upon ourselves by furnishing matter for gossip , and possibly , though perhaps unwittingly , violate our obligations . Yours fraternally , E . GOTTHEIL .

Old Warrants.

OLD WARRANTS .

To the Editor of THE FREEMASON ' S CHRONICLE . DEAR SIR AND BROTHER , —Tho following from Burke ' s rccragcovd Baronetage ( Ed . 18 ( 34 ) , setting forth tho titles , & c . of the Dukes of Vthole and a few particulars respecting the two Avho wero Grand

Masters of " Ancients , " will donbtless interest your readers , and especially Bro . Constable . Athole , Duke , Marquess , aud Earl of ( Sir George Augustus Frederick John Murray K . T . ) , Marquess and Earl of Tullibardine , Earl of Stratbiay and Strathardale , Viscount Glenalmond , Balquhidar , and

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