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  • Sept. 30, 1848
  • Page 11
  • ON FREEMASONRY,
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The Freemasons' Quarterly Review, Sept. 30, 1848: Page 11

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    Article ON FREEMASONRY, ← Page 3 of 6 →
Page 11

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On Freemasonry,

may gather from some recent disclosures , a most lamentable ignorance on this important point . Such a course would have a tendency to silence some of those worthy brethren who plume themselves on their want of masonic knowledge . ' Not Fortune ' s worshipper—' I am now quoting a poet who was greatly esteemed in my youthful days , although not much read at the present

time' Not Fortune's worshipper , nor Fashion ' s fool , Not Lucre's madman , nor Ambition's tool , Not proud nor servile ; be one poet ' s praise , That , if he pleas'd , he pleas'd by manly ways ; That flattery , even 10 kiue . s , he held a shame , And thought a lie in verse or prose the same . ' "—POPE .

And our friend James , having delivered himself of this sententious conclusion , chuckled inwardly , as though he had achieved some wonderful and unexpected discovery . "And , " he continued , " there is another notable circumstance , which may be called a purple mystery , for it exceeds my comprehension altogether . How is it possible that the brethren who are in the habit of denouncing the ' Freemasons' Quarterly Review , ' from their places in Grand Lodge , in language which is neither masonic nor gentlemanly , on the plea that its reports are garbled and consequently false , ( for

they are too prudent to advance any other objection to a periodical which has i-endered such abundant services to the holy cause of Masonry , )—after repeated declarations that they have never read a single number—should be so intimately acquainted with the contents ? And one excellent brother , in proof of bis assertion that the reports are garbled and false , candidly confesses that although he had never read it , he had once or twice seen the cover ! What a wonderful versatility of intellect a man must possess who is capable of pronouncing an opinion on the merits or demerits of a

publication by an inspection of the cover ! It is a sort of moral mesmerism , and would well become a follower of Joseph Balsamo . And our intelligent brother is not a solitary instance of this amazing perspicacity . We fortunately possess many others , who , strange to tell , after all their denunciations of a book they never read , arrive at the sapient conclusion , under a new phasis , that the reports on the whole are tolerably correct . " See F . Q . R ., 1847 , p . 184 , and 1 S 48 , p . 17 S . )

James now took the F . Q . R . for 1848 , and turning to page 250 , read the following passage from a speech in Grand Lodge , which is quite refreshing , after the above avowals of helpless ignorance : — " W . Bro . Whitmore thought every Mason bound to express an opinion on such a subject . He held the proud position of Secretary to an institution ( the Asylum for Aged and Decayed Freemasons ) , which had often been named in Grand Lodge , and in that capacity be had been in the habit of receiving from Australia , India , China , and other parts , letters and donations on behalf of

this charity , and could state that these donations had been principally produced by the perusal of the " Freemasons' Quarterly Review . " He thought that the brother who commanded the authors to stand forth might have spared his satire , and not have denounced a publication which he believed was of vast importance to the whole masonic world . He had ample opportunities of knowing that the Masons of the provinces were highly indebted to the publication . " James was now in his element ; for if ever there was an enthusiastic

admirer of a periodical work , it was this excellent man in his predeliction for the F . Q . R ., which he was wont to say , he considered , in its sphere , the most useful journal ever published ; an opinion with which we cordially agree . He went on : — " Hear what Bro . Nash adds to the above ( p . 249)—' It was not to be denied that propositions took place in Grand Lodge which should be made known to the Masons of the provinces ; but were such always made known to them ? How was the subject of the proposed

“The Freemasons' Quarterly Review: 1848-09-30, Page 11” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 13 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fqr/issues/fqr_30091848/page/11/.
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Title Category Page
THE FREEMASONS ' QUARTERLY REVIEW, Article 1
THE RECENT GRAND LODGE. Article 3
ON FREEMASONRY, Article 9
CHAPTER III. Article 14
THE FREEMASONS' LEXICON. Article 18
SOLAR SPOTS. Article 26
MASONIC MEMOIR OF THE LATE BRO. GEO. AARONS, Article 29
CHRONOLOGICAL EPOCHS OF THE BIBLE. Article 33
KNIGHTS OF CHRIST. Article 34
HISTORICAL VIEWS OF PROGRESS. Article 35
TO THE EDITOR. Article 38
COLLECTANEA. Article 39
POETRY. Article 43
THE RED-CROSS FLAG. Article 43
MASONIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 44
SUPREME GRAND CHAPTER OF ROYAL ARCH MASONS OF ENGLAND. Article 45
UNITED GRAND LODGE OF ENGLAND. Article 46
MASONIC ABILITY. Article 57
THE MASONIC LAWYER. Article 58
GRAND CONCLAVE OF ENGLAND AND WALES. Article 58
SUPREME GRAND COUNCIL 33d. Article 59
n—ETPZ^—M^rrm^—.-.,m^muwmmm*JM^m-*i*^m±i... Article 59
CONSECRATION OF THE YARBOROUGH LODGE, No. 812, Article 60
ASYLUM FOR WORTHY AGED, AND DECAYED FREEMASONS. Article 61
CHIT CHAT . Article 62
Obituary. Article 65
PROVINCIAL Article 66
SCOTLAND. Article 96
IRELAND. Article 97
FOREIGN. Article 98
A MERICA.—UNITED STATES. Article 101
INDIA. Article 102
THE GENERAL ASSUEANCE ADVOCATE. Article 109
THE INSTITUTE OF ACTUARIES. Article 115
LITERARY NOTICES. Article 122
Bro. HARRIS'S New Tracing Boards. R. Spencer. London. Article 125
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 127
CONTENTS. Article 129
A MASONIC GEM (!) Article 130
THE HREEMASONS' QUARTERLY REVIEW,SECOND SERIES. Article 131
/~* ALL'S ANTIBILIOTJS PILLS—The most us... Article 132
FREEMASONS' QUARTERLY ADVERTISER. SECOND... Article 133
ENGINEERS', MASONIC, AND UNIVERSAL MUTUA... Article 134
CLERICAL, MEDICAL, AND GENERAL Article 136
BONUSES. The two.first Divisions average... Article 136
MENTOR LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY, 2, OLD BR... Article 137
BRITARSftSIA LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY, 1, ... Article 138
CITY OF LONDON LIFE ASSURANCE SOCIETY, 2... Article 139
LIFE ASSURANCE SOCIETY, IScottamic 6, NE... Article 140
^HIS BAWDON ASSWB,A^CI^ ooaa?oaAsiofflr,... Article 141
FREEMASONRY. nnHE NEW CRAFT TRACING BOAR... Article 141
BRO. T. VESPER, SSASttMSCi osfSSWEMjEiS,... Article 141
THE CANTERBURY CONGREGATION "PEG respect... Article 141
FREEMASONRY. Just published, price Is. A... Article 142
FREEMASONS' HOTEL, GREAT QUEEN STREET, L... Article 142
ADVANTAGE OF CHLOROFORM IN MIDWIFERY. Ju... Article 142
FREEMASONRY. ROBINSON, LATE ACKLAM, ]D R... Article 143
FREEMASONRY. W. EVANS, MASONIC JEWELLER ... Article 143
FREEMASONRY. A. D. LOEWENSTARK; MANUFACT... Article 143
HAND BOOK OV FREE MASONRY. In the press,... Article 144
NEW MASONIC HYMN AND GLEE. Just publishe... Article 144
jU EW BOOK OF THE LAWS OF THE GRAND LODG... Article 144
EaGISQBTF I ECOHOMIT « STEPHENS' DYES fo... Article 145
COMFORT FOR TBKDER FEET, &e. HALL and Co... Article 145
TO THE CRAFT. Article 146
THE LONDON GENERAL TAILORING ESHABLISHMENT. Article 147
BIBBII ^^^^^^^ ^ ^ ^ ^^^^^^ i^^^^^^^^^^^... Article 147
i;;^-Vij#Fj?p£^ ^sJbreSji^Gavjb^^^ ! f i... Article 147
FOUR-FIFTHS, 01 EIGHTY PER CENT, of the ... Article 148
z :li%o%^& T 6 FP f N JK | D E CKA^V^VE ... Article 148
^ ;r^M^^ B^o - TH¥RViv.^pbTitY; ~ ;! : .... Article 148
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

On Freemasonry,

may gather from some recent disclosures , a most lamentable ignorance on this important point . Such a course would have a tendency to silence some of those worthy brethren who plume themselves on their want of masonic knowledge . ' Not Fortune ' s worshipper—' I am now quoting a poet who was greatly esteemed in my youthful days , although not much read at the present

time' Not Fortune's worshipper , nor Fashion ' s fool , Not Lucre's madman , nor Ambition's tool , Not proud nor servile ; be one poet ' s praise , That , if he pleas'd , he pleas'd by manly ways ; That flattery , even 10 kiue . s , he held a shame , And thought a lie in verse or prose the same . ' "—POPE .

And our friend James , having delivered himself of this sententious conclusion , chuckled inwardly , as though he had achieved some wonderful and unexpected discovery . "And , " he continued , " there is another notable circumstance , which may be called a purple mystery , for it exceeds my comprehension altogether . How is it possible that the brethren who are in the habit of denouncing the ' Freemasons' Quarterly Review , ' from their places in Grand Lodge , in language which is neither masonic nor gentlemanly , on the plea that its reports are garbled and consequently false , ( for

they are too prudent to advance any other objection to a periodical which has i-endered such abundant services to the holy cause of Masonry , )—after repeated declarations that they have never read a single number—should be so intimately acquainted with the contents ? And one excellent brother , in proof of bis assertion that the reports are garbled and false , candidly confesses that although he had never read it , he had once or twice seen the cover ! What a wonderful versatility of intellect a man must possess who is capable of pronouncing an opinion on the merits or demerits of a

publication by an inspection of the cover ! It is a sort of moral mesmerism , and would well become a follower of Joseph Balsamo . And our intelligent brother is not a solitary instance of this amazing perspicacity . We fortunately possess many others , who , strange to tell , after all their denunciations of a book they never read , arrive at the sapient conclusion , under a new phasis , that the reports on the whole are tolerably correct . " See F . Q . R ., 1847 , p . 184 , and 1 S 48 , p . 17 S . )

James now took the F . Q . R . for 1848 , and turning to page 250 , read the following passage from a speech in Grand Lodge , which is quite refreshing , after the above avowals of helpless ignorance : — " W . Bro . Whitmore thought every Mason bound to express an opinion on such a subject . He held the proud position of Secretary to an institution ( the Asylum for Aged and Decayed Freemasons ) , which had often been named in Grand Lodge , and in that capacity be had been in the habit of receiving from Australia , India , China , and other parts , letters and donations on behalf of

this charity , and could state that these donations had been principally produced by the perusal of the " Freemasons' Quarterly Review . " He thought that the brother who commanded the authors to stand forth might have spared his satire , and not have denounced a publication which he believed was of vast importance to the whole masonic world . He had ample opportunities of knowing that the Masons of the provinces were highly indebted to the publication . " James was now in his element ; for if ever there was an enthusiastic

admirer of a periodical work , it was this excellent man in his predeliction for the F . Q . R ., which he was wont to say , he considered , in its sphere , the most useful journal ever published ; an opinion with which we cordially agree . He went on : — " Hear what Bro . Nash adds to the above ( p . 249)—' It was not to be denied that propositions took place in Grand Lodge which should be made known to the Masons of the provinces ; but were such always made known to them ? How was the subject of the proposed

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