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Article THE FEEEMASONS' QUARTERLY MAGAZINE. ← Page 5 of 12 →
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The Feeemasons' Quarterly Magazine.
of the times , —to give the best article that can be supplied at the lowest possible remunerating price . In adopting this course the Proprietors , Publisher , and Editor feel assured that they will meet the wishes of the Craft ; and they are confident a much larger amount of patronage
ancl support will now be accorded to the publication than it has yet enjoyed . As an evidence of what they intend to clo , they claim the consideration of the Fraternity to the present number— -the first of a New Series , under the title of THE FREEMASONS' QUARTERLY MAGAZINE—in which will
be found papers from the pen of Miss Pardoe , the gifted , accomplished , ancl intelligent Authoress of " The Lives and Times of Louis XIV . " and , " Marie de Medicis ; " from Dion Boucicault , Esq ., whose talent is unquestioned ; from Bro . the Rev . T . A . Buckley , M . A ., one of the most indefatigable and
talented writers of the clay ; from the Author of " Stray Leaves from a Freemason ' s Note Book ;"—which is well known to the Craft—ancl other writers of acknowledged reputation and distinction . In fixture numbers it is intended to secure the aid and co-operation of other equally distinguished correspondents :
the determination being to spare no expense , and to leave no effort untried to make the publication worthy of the Craft , and yet to give it such a general literary character , as to insure for it a circulation as wide ancl influential as that of any of the oldest established periodicals of the clay .
The propositions which are here detailed "freely and at length , " as far as the literary portions of the periodical are concerned , seem to demand an appeal to the generosity of the Craft , for their active assistance and support . The principles of the Order are too well known to Masons to need any
elucidation here . But this may be said openly and unequivocally , that those principles , fully carried out , will give the promoters of the present scheme no cause to regret that they have relied upon the patronage of a body of men who are foremost in works of liberality , ancl ever ready to promote the study and advancement of the liberal arts and sciences . In the firm belief that by making this publication worthy of esteem and
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.
The Feeemasons' Quarterly Magazine.
of the times , —to give the best article that can be supplied at the lowest possible remunerating price . In adopting this course the Proprietors , Publisher , and Editor feel assured that they will meet the wishes of the Craft ; and they are confident a much larger amount of patronage
ancl support will now be accorded to the publication than it has yet enjoyed . As an evidence of what they intend to clo , they claim the consideration of the Fraternity to the present number— -the first of a New Series , under the title of THE FREEMASONS' QUARTERLY MAGAZINE—in which will
be found papers from the pen of Miss Pardoe , the gifted , accomplished , ancl intelligent Authoress of " The Lives and Times of Louis XIV . " and , " Marie de Medicis ; " from Dion Boucicault , Esq ., whose talent is unquestioned ; from Bro . the Rev . T . A . Buckley , M . A ., one of the most indefatigable and
talented writers of the clay ; from the Author of " Stray Leaves from a Freemason ' s Note Book ;"—which is well known to the Craft—ancl other writers of acknowledged reputation and distinction . In fixture numbers it is intended to secure the aid and co-operation of other equally distinguished correspondents :
the determination being to spare no expense , and to leave no effort untried to make the publication worthy of the Craft , and yet to give it such a general literary character , as to insure for it a circulation as wide ancl influential as that of any of the oldest established periodicals of the clay .
The propositions which are here detailed "freely and at length , " as far as the literary portions of the periodical are concerned , seem to demand an appeal to the generosity of the Craft , for their active assistance and support . The principles of the Order are too well known to Masons to need any
elucidation here . But this may be said openly and unequivocally , that those principles , fully carried out , will give the promoters of the present scheme no cause to regret that they have relied upon the patronage of a body of men who are foremost in works of liberality , ancl ever ready to promote the study and advancement of the liberal arts and sciences . In the firm belief that by making this publication worthy of esteem and