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Page 8

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

Ar00800

TO OUR READERS . The FREEMASON is a Weekly Newspaper , price 2 d . It is published every Friday morning , and contains the most important , interesting , and useful information relating to Freemasonry in every degree . Subscription , including postage : United America , India . India , China , & c

Kingdom , thc Continent , & c . Via Brindisi . Twelve Months 10 s . 6 d . 12 s . od . 17 s . 4 d . Six „ 5 s . 3 d . 6 s . ( id . 8 s . 8 d . Three „ 2 s . 8 d . 3 s . 3 d . 4 s . 6 d . Subscriptions may be paid for in stamps , but Post Office Orders or Cheques arc preferred , the former payable to

GEORGE KENNING , CHIEF OFFICE , LONDON , the latter crossed London and Joint Stock Bank . Advertisements and other business communications should be adelrcsseel to thc Publisher . Communications on literary subjects and books for

review are to be forwarded to the Editor . A nonymous correspondence will be wholly disregarded , and thc return of rejected MSS . cannot be guaranteed . Further information will be supplied OP application to the Publisher , 198 , Fleet-street , London .

Ar00801

IMPORTANT NOTICE . COLONIAL and FOREIGN SUBSCRIBERS are informed that acknowledgments of remittances received are published iu the first number of every month .

It is very necessary for our readers to advise us of all money orders they remit , more especially those from the United States of America and India ; otherwise we cannot tell where to credit them .

Ar00802

REMITTANCES RECEIVED . Andrews , G ., India P . O . O . £ 1 6 o Austin , W . W ., Indiana „ 1 3 It Bidincope , J „ 740 Bright , F ., New York , 0120 Carr , Gi , San Francisco , 0120

De Burgh Adam Lodge , New Zealand „ 280 Dumbrillc , Jno ., Canada •,, - o •9 o Edwards , L ., Paris „ " r 6 o Force , Australia „ 1 1 ' 8 Hawlins Cash o 2 0 Oddy , F . F ., Egvpt P . O . O . I if > o Wilson , M „ o 17 3

Answers To Correspondents.

Answers to Correspondents .

ODDY , F . F . —The additional information has unfortunately reached us ton late for insertion . T . S . G . ( New Zealand ) . —Thc information reached us too late . Eun . vrA , —In the report of Francis Burdett Lodge , No . 11503 , For "the W . M . raised Bro . Clarke to the degree of M . M . " read " I he Immediate Past Master raised " etc . In Notes and Queries , for Granel Lodge of "Holland " read " Scotland . "

BOOKS & c . RECEIVED . "Risorgimento" ( Malta ); "Thc Liberal Freemason " ( Boston ); " Grand Imperial Council Illinois ;"" Sheep , " by Joseph Darby ; Illustrated Catalogue of Dutch Flower Roots ; Daniels Brothers , Norwich ; " Australian Freemason ; " " New York Dispatch ; " " Thc Scottish Freemason ; " " Later Lyrics , " bv Bro . J . E . Carpenter , Ph . D .,

Charles Havvkesley , 13 , Queen Victoria-street ; "Columbia and Canada , " by W . F . Rae , Daleiy Isbistcr , & Co . ; Proceedings of the Granel Commandery of Maine ; Proceedings of the Grand Lodge of Massachusetts ; "Hebrew Leader ; " " The Poet ' s Magazine ; " " La Chaine el'Union ;" " Die Bauhiitte ; " " The XXth Century ; " "The Living shall Praise Thee j" " Hajnal ; " " Lodge Hymns , " Francis Burdett Lodge .

Births ,Marriages And Deaths.

Births , Marriages and Deaths .

[ The charge is 2 s . ud . for announcements , not exceed ing four lines , under this heading . ]

BIRTHS . EL MOT . —On the 26 th inst ., at Northallerton , the wife of G . W . Elliot , Esq ., M . P ., of a son . H EATON . —On the 23 rd inst ., at Worsley , near Manchester , the wife of Capt . H . Heaton , of a son . MARRIAGE .

HYDE HARRIS—CARGIU .. —On thc 10 th August , at St . Paul ' s Church , Dunedin , N . Z ., by the Ven . Archdeacon Edwards , John Edward Hyde Harris , Barrister-at-law , eldest son of John Hyde Harris , Esep , of the Grange , Duneelin , N . Z ., to Madeline , second daughter of John Cargill , Esq ., of Seaview House .

DEATHS . CoLLiNomocE . —On the 27 th inst ., at 31 , "Wilderness Row , Edmund Collingridge , after a lingering illness , aged 71 , deeply lamented . Friends kindly accept this intimation .

HALL . —On the 23 rel inst ., at Lloyd-square , London , Henrietta , the beloved wife of William John Hall , formerly of Newark , Notts . SWALLOW . —On the 19 th inst ., Mrs . Swallow , wife of Bro . B . H . Swallow , of Loelge 15 6 3 .

Ar00808

TheFreemason, SATURDAY , NOVEMBER 3 , 1877 .

The "Freimaurer" And The Grand Secretary.

THE "FREIMAURER" AND THE GRAND SECRETARY .

The Freimaurer of Vienna for October is pleased to indulge itself in a very singular and ridiculous attack on our excellent Grand Secretary , Bro . Hervey , which will be at once indignantly repelled by all English brethren . It seems that Bro . Dr . Beigel , who ought to know

a good deal better , and who we are very sorry to see in such a false position , assumes in the Freimaurer that Bro . Hervey has something to do with the Freemason , and actually wrote , or " inspired " as they say abroad , a special article in this journal , which seems to have aroused the

susceptibilities of Bro . Dr . Beigel to the very uttermost . We need hardly assure our readers . , though it is a common mistake abroad , that Bro . Hervey has nothing to do with the Freemason , that he knows nothing of our articles , or that the Freemason belongs solely to Bro . Geo .

Kenning , and is a thoroughly independent Ma sonic newspaper . It does happen , indeed , that some of the views we have thought well to express from time to time relative to the Grand Orient of Fiance , and its unfortunate " Fiasco , ' ' have chimed in with the honest utterances of

our hard-working Grand Secretary . But even wilh respect to such opinions , which brought us into collision originally with Bros . Caubet and Grimaud , they were only expressed by Bro . John Hervey as Bro . John Hervey , not officially as Grand Secretary . We pointed

that fact out at the time , and are astonished to find that Bro . Dr . Beigel , with his knowledge of England and the English , and their free-spoken expression of manly independence of thought and opinion , does not realize the differ ence as between an official circular and a speech

delivered at a private lodge . But , as regards the special expression which seems so much to have annoyed Bro . Dr . Beigel , it was not written nor spoken even by Bro . Hervey at all . He has never said anything of the kind . The remark , such as it is , is purely our own , an expression of

individual Masonic opinion , and clothed with no official authority in the slightest manner , and not evenwithanv importance , except " quantum valet , " to the appreciation and intelligence of our brethren . All Englishmen and Masons are quite aware of the independence of the press in our

country , and of the mistaken notions which foreigners often entertain upon the subject . The Freemason is peculiarly independent , as it never seeks to represent any person or any clique , or any views , but is simply the organ of our brotherhood , impartiall y directed

and carefully edited , as far as our lights go . for the honour and welfare of our English and Cosmopolitan Freemasonry . What can Bro . Beigel mean when he says , or how can he venture to express an opinion , that Bro . Hervey ought to resign his office , because forsooth Bro .

Beigel supposes him to have said something about the ill-omened position ot the Grand Orient ? We must say to Bro . Beigel frankly and distinctly , that such a remark constitutes a direct insult , not only to our esteemed Grand Secretary , but also to our whole English

brotherhood . And the reason Bro . Dr . Beigel gives is no less curious than astonishing . He says the Grand Orient of Hungary has done the same , but he forgets that " two blacks don ' t make a white , " and if the Grand Orient of Hungary likes to " follow suit , " and equally do wrong ,

how does that affect us who are trying to do right and maintain the truth ? If the Grand Orient of Hungary has done as Bro . Beigel avers , all we can say is , " tant pis" for the Grand Orient of Hungary , and that all our remarks relative to the Grand Orients of France

and Belgium equally apply to the Grand Orient of Hungary . Indeed , " forewarned is forearmed , " and if , as Bro . Dr . Beigel declares the lodges under the Grand Orient of Hungary openly reject the name of God , we English brethren must equally give its such lodges a wide berth . We , however , have doubts on the subject , as we

The "Freimaurer" And The Grand Secretary.

know there are very many worthy Hungarian brethren who will deeply grieve at such a servile and baneful imitation of the mistaken and un-Masonic proceedings of the Grand Orients of France and Belgium ! As far as we ourselves are

concerned , we care nothing for childish criticism or unfounded assertion , but we leave them to the appreciation of the intelligent and the animadversion of the just , to the kind and fraternal consideration of all true Freemasons at home and abroad .

A Justificaton Of Persecution.

A JUSTIFICATON OF PERSECUTION .

We live in strange times , and have often to listen to painful paradoxes . But , perhaps , one of the most distressing of theories , and the most outrageous of perversities we have recently come across , is the justification , by a certain sect amongst us , of Roman Catholic persecution . We

had left behind us for ever , we had hoped , those dark and dangerous days , in which persecution was assumed to be , though ignorant ] y and irreligiously , the normal duty of Christianity . We had banished from amongst us , never to return , we had fondly trusted , the unhallowed sword

of Dominic and the sanguinary " Auto-da-fes " of a hateful and ruthless Inquisition . Certain unsavoury allocutions and not a few silly speeches of fiery Ultramontanes seemed to bear witness that the massacre of St . Bartholomew was not objected to , " en principe" as the French say ,

and that the zeal was'not wanting , only the power , to burn a fellow-creature , who differed from those angry exponents of Truth , in this " ism , " or that " ology . " Yet we confess we treated the matter as a little hasty outburst of

fanaticism on the part of a few , riot the result of deep conviction or abiding teaching , as regards the many . But as nothing so instructs however , as good example , so nothing is so contagious as false teaching . It seems that this revival of the basest " outcome " of Rome ' s

darkest days has found an exponent in the Church of England . Some preacher , of more or less fame , older or younger , we know not , 01 care not , has not long- ago preached a sermon in the good old church of St . ' Mary , Southampton , when be " thanked God for raising up St .

Dominic and St . Francis , who , by sharp treatment , put an end to the heresy of Albin . " A Dr . Sheppard , of London , objecting naturally to such " burning questions , " asks for an explanation , which he does not receive : and Oh ' . yo shades of William and Samuel Wilberforce , such a

thoroughly un-English act and irreligious proposition is neither repudiated nor repiobated by the Rector apparently , though we should be very happy to hear , for his own sake , that it is so . at once and fully . Such an expression ought never to have been permitted from apulpitof the tolerant Church

of England , which knows nothing of persecution , which favours liberty of conscience , which holds the priceless right of private judgement , and condemns alike the " iires of Smithfield" and the tortue chambers of the Inquisition . Now we say this , for two reasons . First we have many

enlightened brethren at Southampton , to whom this outburst of ignorant and excited Ultramontane folly in the Church of England will be productive of great grief , and not a little dismay . All we can say to them is , that such idle raving is the hopeless monomonia of a " windbag" or a

mountebank , who either is so fanatical as not to realize the wickedness of his own proposition , or so entirely " non-compos mentis , " as to be rather a subject for pity than reproach . And we allude to to it in the second place , because we have 3 large number of Chaplains amongst us , educated

cultivated , intelligent men , nearly all members of the Church of England , who will equally regret such impertinence , and disavow such indefensible intolerance . As Freemasons , we abhor and denounce the " debasing practice of persecution , " and that any one in this 19 th century can deliberately , before a congregation of Christians , ot

laud the sanguinary and pagan barbarities the Inquisition , says a great deal for the patience of the congregation , and the perversity of the preacher . We , however , have done our duty , as before our Southampton brethren , our Ang lican Craft , and our Cosmopolitan Order , in branding such words , by whomsoever spoken , as an outrage on common sense and decency , a grie "''

“The Freemason: 1877-11-03, Page 8” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 9 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fvl/issues/fvl_03111877/page/8/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
CONTENTS. Article 1
THE "FREEMASON" INDIAN FAMINE FUND. Article 1
REPORTS OF MASONIC MEETINGS. Article 1
Royal Arch. Article 3
Mark Masonry. Article 4
Knights Templar. Article 4
Red Cross of Constantine. Article 4
THE ROYAL ORDER OF SIKHA AND THE SAT B'HAI. Article 4
TRIENNIAL CONCLAVE OF THE MASONIC KNIGHTS TEMPLAR IN AMERICA. Article 5
MASONRY IN QUITE A NEW LIGHT. Article 5
THE CAPITAL OF TURKEY. Article 5
ROYAL MASONIC BOYS' SCHOOL. Article 5
PROVINCIAL GRAND CHAPTER OF YORKSHIRE. Article 5
Public Amusements. Article 6
Masonic and General Tidings. Article 6
SKETCHES OF MASONIC CHARACTER. No. XI. Article 7
Obituary. Article 7
Reviews. Article 7
PROVINCIAL GRAND LODGE OF HAMPSHIRE AND THE.ISLE OF WIGHT. Article 7
NOTES ON ART, &c. Article 7
THE BEDFORD AND HALL MOONS. Article 7
Untitled Article 8
Untitled Article 8
Untitled Article 8
Answers to Correspondents. Article 8
Births ,Marriages and Deaths. Article 8
Untitled Article 8
THE "FREIMAURER" AND THE GRAND SECRETARY. Article 8
A JUSTIFICATON OF PERSECUTION. Article 8
ADVICE GRATIS. Article 9
THE HAZARDS OF LIFE. Article 9
INDIAN FAMINE FUND. Article 9
Original Correspondence. Article 9
THE RED CROSS OF CONSTANTINE IN THE UNITED STATES. Article 10
CONSECRATION OF THE URBAN CHAPTER, No. 1196. Article 10
LONDON MASONIC CLUB. Article 11
SUPREME GRAND CHAPTER. Article 11
STAND ON THE OLD PLATFORM. Article 11
CONSECRATION OF THE CENTURION LODGE, No. 1718. Article 12
A NOBLE DEED. Article 12
FREEMASONRY IN KANSAS. Article 12
THE YOUNG PRINCES ON BOARD THE " BRITANNIA." Article 12
METROPOLITAN MASONIC MEETINGS. Article 12
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Ar00800

TO OUR READERS . The FREEMASON is a Weekly Newspaper , price 2 d . It is published every Friday morning , and contains the most important , interesting , and useful information relating to Freemasonry in every degree . Subscription , including postage : United America , India . India , China , & c

Kingdom , thc Continent , & c . Via Brindisi . Twelve Months 10 s . 6 d . 12 s . od . 17 s . 4 d . Six „ 5 s . 3 d . 6 s . ( id . 8 s . 8 d . Three „ 2 s . 8 d . 3 s . 3 d . 4 s . 6 d . Subscriptions may be paid for in stamps , but Post Office Orders or Cheques arc preferred , the former payable to

GEORGE KENNING , CHIEF OFFICE , LONDON , the latter crossed London and Joint Stock Bank . Advertisements and other business communications should be adelrcsseel to thc Publisher . Communications on literary subjects and books for

review are to be forwarded to the Editor . A nonymous correspondence will be wholly disregarded , and thc return of rejected MSS . cannot be guaranteed . Further information will be supplied OP application to the Publisher , 198 , Fleet-street , London .

Ar00801

IMPORTANT NOTICE . COLONIAL and FOREIGN SUBSCRIBERS are informed that acknowledgments of remittances received are published iu the first number of every month .

It is very necessary for our readers to advise us of all money orders they remit , more especially those from the United States of America and India ; otherwise we cannot tell where to credit them .

Ar00802

REMITTANCES RECEIVED . Andrews , G ., India P . O . O . £ 1 6 o Austin , W . W ., Indiana „ 1 3 It Bidincope , J „ 740 Bright , F ., New York , 0120 Carr , Gi , San Francisco , 0120

De Burgh Adam Lodge , New Zealand „ 280 Dumbrillc , Jno ., Canada •,, - o •9 o Edwards , L ., Paris „ " r 6 o Force , Australia „ 1 1 ' 8 Hawlins Cash o 2 0 Oddy , F . F ., Egvpt P . O . O . I if > o Wilson , M „ o 17 3

Answers To Correspondents.

Answers to Correspondents .

ODDY , F . F . —The additional information has unfortunately reached us ton late for insertion . T . S . G . ( New Zealand ) . —Thc information reached us too late . Eun . vrA , —In the report of Francis Burdett Lodge , No . 11503 , For "the W . M . raised Bro . Clarke to the degree of M . M . " read " I he Immediate Past Master raised " etc . In Notes and Queries , for Granel Lodge of "Holland " read " Scotland . "

BOOKS & c . RECEIVED . "Risorgimento" ( Malta ); "Thc Liberal Freemason " ( Boston ); " Grand Imperial Council Illinois ;"" Sheep , " by Joseph Darby ; Illustrated Catalogue of Dutch Flower Roots ; Daniels Brothers , Norwich ; " Australian Freemason ; " " New York Dispatch ; " " Thc Scottish Freemason ; " " Later Lyrics , " bv Bro . J . E . Carpenter , Ph . D .,

Charles Havvkesley , 13 , Queen Victoria-street ; "Columbia and Canada , " by W . F . Rae , Daleiy Isbistcr , & Co . ; Proceedings of the Granel Commandery of Maine ; Proceedings of the Grand Lodge of Massachusetts ; "Hebrew Leader ; " " The Poet ' s Magazine ; " " La Chaine el'Union ;" " Die Bauhiitte ; " " The XXth Century ; " "The Living shall Praise Thee j" " Hajnal ; " " Lodge Hymns , " Francis Burdett Lodge .

Births ,Marriages And Deaths.

Births , Marriages and Deaths .

[ The charge is 2 s . ud . for announcements , not exceed ing four lines , under this heading . ]

BIRTHS . EL MOT . —On the 26 th inst ., at Northallerton , the wife of G . W . Elliot , Esq ., M . P ., of a son . H EATON . —On the 23 rd inst ., at Worsley , near Manchester , the wife of Capt . H . Heaton , of a son . MARRIAGE .

HYDE HARRIS—CARGIU .. —On thc 10 th August , at St . Paul ' s Church , Dunedin , N . Z ., by the Ven . Archdeacon Edwards , John Edward Hyde Harris , Barrister-at-law , eldest son of John Hyde Harris , Esep , of the Grange , Duneelin , N . Z ., to Madeline , second daughter of John Cargill , Esq ., of Seaview House .

DEATHS . CoLLiNomocE . —On the 27 th inst ., at 31 , "Wilderness Row , Edmund Collingridge , after a lingering illness , aged 71 , deeply lamented . Friends kindly accept this intimation .

HALL . —On the 23 rel inst ., at Lloyd-square , London , Henrietta , the beloved wife of William John Hall , formerly of Newark , Notts . SWALLOW . —On the 19 th inst ., Mrs . Swallow , wife of Bro . B . H . Swallow , of Loelge 15 6 3 .

Ar00808

TheFreemason, SATURDAY , NOVEMBER 3 , 1877 .

The "Freimaurer" And The Grand Secretary.

THE "FREIMAURER" AND THE GRAND SECRETARY .

The Freimaurer of Vienna for October is pleased to indulge itself in a very singular and ridiculous attack on our excellent Grand Secretary , Bro . Hervey , which will be at once indignantly repelled by all English brethren . It seems that Bro . Dr . Beigel , who ought to know

a good deal better , and who we are very sorry to see in such a false position , assumes in the Freimaurer that Bro . Hervey has something to do with the Freemason , and actually wrote , or " inspired " as they say abroad , a special article in this journal , which seems to have aroused the

susceptibilities of Bro . Dr . Beigel to the very uttermost . We need hardly assure our readers . , though it is a common mistake abroad , that Bro . Hervey has nothing to do with the Freemason , that he knows nothing of our articles , or that the Freemason belongs solely to Bro . Geo .

Kenning , and is a thoroughly independent Ma sonic newspaper . It does happen , indeed , that some of the views we have thought well to express from time to time relative to the Grand Orient of Fiance , and its unfortunate " Fiasco , ' ' have chimed in with the honest utterances of

our hard-working Grand Secretary . But even wilh respect to such opinions , which brought us into collision originally with Bros . Caubet and Grimaud , they were only expressed by Bro . John Hervey as Bro . John Hervey , not officially as Grand Secretary . We pointed

that fact out at the time , and are astonished to find that Bro . Dr . Beigel , with his knowledge of England and the English , and their free-spoken expression of manly independence of thought and opinion , does not realize the differ ence as between an official circular and a speech

delivered at a private lodge . But , as regards the special expression which seems so much to have annoyed Bro . Dr . Beigel , it was not written nor spoken even by Bro . Hervey at all . He has never said anything of the kind . The remark , such as it is , is purely our own , an expression of

individual Masonic opinion , and clothed with no official authority in the slightest manner , and not evenwithanv importance , except " quantum valet , " to the appreciation and intelligence of our brethren . All Englishmen and Masons are quite aware of the independence of the press in our

country , and of the mistaken notions which foreigners often entertain upon the subject . The Freemason is peculiarly independent , as it never seeks to represent any person or any clique , or any views , but is simply the organ of our brotherhood , impartiall y directed

and carefully edited , as far as our lights go . for the honour and welfare of our English and Cosmopolitan Freemasonry . What can Bro . Beigel mean when he says , or how can he venture to express an opinion , that Bro . Hervey ought to resign his office , because forsooth Bro .

Beigel supposes him to have said something about the ill-omened position ot the Grand Orient ? We must say to Bro . Beigel frankly and distinctly , that such a remark constitutes a direct insult , not only to our esteemed Grand Secretary , but also to our whole English

brotherhood . And the reason Bro . Dr . Beigel gives is no less curious than astonishing . He says the Grand Orient of Hungary has done the same , but he forgets that " two blacks don ' t make a white , " and if the Grand Orient of Hungary likes to " follow suit , " and equally do wrong ,

how does that affect us who are trying to do right and maintain the truth ? If the Grand Orient of Hungary has done as Bro . Beigel avers , all we can say is , " tant pis" for the Grand Orient of Hungary , and that all our remarks relative to the Grand Orients of France

and Belgium equally apply to the Grand Orient of Hungary . Indeed , " forewarned is forearmed , " and if , as Bro . Dr . Beigel declares the lodges under the Grand Orient of Hungary openly reject the name of God , we English brethren must equally give its such lodges a wide berth . We , however , have doubts on the subject , as we

The "Freimaurer" And The Grand Secretary.

know there are very many worthy Hungarian brethren who will deeply grieve at such a servile and baneful imitation of the mistaken and un-Masonic proceedings of the Grand Orients of France and Belgium ! As far as we ourselves are

concerned , we care nothing for childish criticism or unfounded assertion , but we leave them to the appreciation of the intelligent and the animadversion of the just , to the kind and fraternal consideration of all true Freemasons at home and abroad .

A Justificaton Of Persecution.

A JUSTIFICATON OF PERSECUTION .

We live in strange times , and have often to listen to painful paradoxes . But , perhaps , one of the most distressing of theories , and the most outrageous of perversities we have recently come across , is the justification , by a certain sect amongst us , of Roman Catholic persecution . We

had left behind us for ever , we had hoped , those dark and dangerous days , in which persecution was assumed to be , though ignorant ] y and irreligiously , the normal duty of Christianity . We had banished from amongst us , never to return , we had fondly trusted , the unhallowed sword

of Dominic and the sanguinary " Auto-da-fes " of a hateful and ruthless Inquisition . Certain unsavoury allocutions and not a few silly speeches of fiery Ultramontanes seemed to bear witness that the massacre of St . Bartholomew was not objected to , " en principe" as the French say ,

and that the zeal was'not wanting , only the power , to burn a fellow-creature , who differed from those angry exponents of Truth , in this " ism , " or that " ology . " Yet we confess we treated the matter as a little hasty outburst of

fanaticism on the part of a few , riot the result of deep conviction or abiding teaching , as regards the many . But as nothing so instructs however , as good example , so nothing is so contagious as false teaching . It seems that this revival of the basest " outcome " of Rome ' s

darkest days has found an exponent in the Church of England . Some preacher , of more or less fame , older or younger , we know not , 01 care not , has not long- ago preached a sermon in the good old church of St . ' Mary , Southampton , when be " thanked God for raising up St .

Dominic and St . Francis , who , by sharp treatment , put an end to the heresy of Albin . " A Dr . Sheppard , of London , objecting naturally to such " burning questions , " asks for an explanation , which he does not receive : and Oh ' . yo shades of William and Samuel Wilberforce , such a

thoroughly un-English act and irreligious proposition is neither repudiated nor repiobated by the Rector apparently , though we should be very happy to hear , for his own sake , that it is so . at once and fully . Such an expression ought never to have been permitted from apulpitof the tolerant Church

of England , which knows nothing of persecution , which favours liberty of conscience , which holds the priceless right of private judgement , and condemns alike the " iires of Smithfield" and the tortue chambers of the Inquisition . Now we say this , for two reasons . First we have many

enlightened brethren at Southampton , to whom this outburst of ignorant and excited Ultramontane folly in the Church of England will be productive of great grief , and not a little dismay . All we can say to them is , that such idle raving is the hopeless monomonia of a " windbag" or a

mountebank , who either is so fanatical as not to realize the wickedness of his own proposition , or so entirely " non-compos mentis , " as to be rather a subject for pity than reproach . And we allude to to it in the second place , because we have 3 large number of Chaplains amongst us , educated

cultivated , intelligent men , nearly all members of the Church of England , who will equally regret such impertinence , and disavow such indefensible intolerance . As Freemasons , we abhor and denounce the " debasing practice of persecution , " and that any one in this 19 th century can deliberately , before a congregation of Christians , ot

laud the sanguinary and pagan barbarities the Inquisition , says a great deal for the patience of the congregation , and the perversity of the preacher . We , however , have done our duty , as before our Southampton brethren , our Ang lican Craft , and our Cosmopolitan Order , in branding such words , by whomsoever spoken , as an outrage on common sense and decency , a grie "''

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