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Article QUARTERLY COMMUNICATION— MARCH 3. Page 1 of 1
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Quarterly Communication— March 3.
QUARTERLY COMMUNICATION— MARCH 3 .
As far as our reporter can understand , any account of the proceedings that took place , is inhibited as A BREACH OF PRIVILEGE . The reason wh y the continuance of a system ( which , if not openly sanctioned by the Grand Master , has , we believe , never received his inhibition by our predecessor ) should be interrupted has yet to be exshall
plained . We therefore await for some edict by which our future arrangements may , we probably think , be made easy . Our readers will , we hope , indulgently measure our position by the standard of necessity—not of inclination . We presume it will not be considered a breach of privilege to state that no further breach was attempted against the privileges of the Asylum ; that a motion for an alteration in the mode of benevolence did not
come on ; and that the motion for the election of Grand Master did not emanate from below the dais , as was some years since settled should be the course adopted , and which was then approved by his Royal Highness ,
Since our last publication , the proceedings of the Grand Lodge of the 30 th of October have been published as a General Report . However it is a meagre instalment of information ; and even what is given is with a peculiar bias . Having previously given full particulars , we leave our readers to judge ofthe relative value of the information afforded them . The unusual promptitude of the publication of the proceedings of the Grand Lod would have met with
ge approbation , if some important matters had been alluded to . The " suppressio vert , " if not a venal or legal trespass , savours of prejudice . The Circulars for December , 1 S 39 ; for March , 1840 ; and for the especial Grand Lodge in April following , are yet unpublished by the Grand Secretary . Our readers , however , are not in the dark , as the circumstances have been noticed in the Review .
GRAND OFFICERS' CLUB . —Present Bro . B . B . Cabbell in the Chair , and about the average number of members . The Grand Secretaryread the Report of the Board , & c , with the notices of motions , and stated generally the business about to be transacted . Dr . Crucefix sent in his resignation as member of the club , on account of indisposition . MASTERS AND PART MASTERS' CLUB . —Bro . Sangster in the Chair . A member reported the notices of motions by the Marquis of Salisbury and other members , on different subjects . A grant of . 3 / . 3-s- to each of the schools was unanimousl y voted .
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.
Quarterly Communication— March 3.
QUARTERLY COMMUNICATION— MARCH 3 .
As far as our reporter can understand , any account of the proceedings that took place , is inhibited as A BREACH OF PRIVILEGE . The reason wh y the continuance of a system ( which , if not openly sanctioned by the Grand Master , has , we believe , never received his inhibition by our predecessor ) should be interrupted has yet to be exshall
plained . We therefore await for some edict by which our future arrangements may , we probably think , be made easy . Our readers will , we hope , indulgently measure our position by the standard of necessity—not of inclination . We presume it will not be considered a breach of privilege to state that no further breach was attempted against the privileges of the Asylum ; that a motion for an alteration in the mode of benevolence did not
come on ; and that the motion for the election of Grand Master did not emanate from below the dais , as was some years since settled should be the course adopted , and which was then approved by his Royal Highness ,
Since our last publication , the proceedings of the Grand Lodge of the 30 th of October have been published as a General Report . However it is a meagre instalment of information ; and even what is given is with a peculiar bias . Having previously given full particulars , we leave our readers to judge ofthe relative value of the information afforded them . The unusual promptitude of the publication of the proceedings of the Grand Lod would have met with
ge approbation , if some important matters had been alluded to . The " suppressio vert , " if not a venal or legal trespass , savours of prejudice . The Circulars for December , 1 S 39 ; for March , 1840 ; and for the especial Grand Lodge in April following , are yet unpublished by the Grand Secretary . Our readers , however , are not in the dark , as the circumstances have been noticed in the Review .
GRAND OFFICERS' CLUB . —Present Bro . B . B . Cabbell in the Chair , and about the average number of members . The Grand Secretaryread the Report of the Board , & c , with the notices of motions , and stated generally the business about to be transacted . Dr . Crucefix sent in his resignation as member of the club , on account of indisposition . MASTERS AND PART MASTERS' CLUB . —Bro . Sangster in the Chair . A member reported the notices of motions by the Marquis of Salisbury and other members , on different subjects . A grant of . 3 / . 3-s- to each of the schools was unanimousl y voted .