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

Contents.

CONTENTS .

LEADERS x Masonic Benevolence in 1882 2 English Masonry in Egpyt ¦ 2 New Year ' s Entertainment at Croydon 3 Mark Masonry 3

18 S 3 and 1 S 83 3 Presentations 3 Obituary 3 CORRESPONDENCEFreemasonry and Volunteering 4 Freemasonry in China 5 Remuneration of OHicers 5 A Visit to the Bovs' School S

CORRESPONDENCE —( Continued)—Candles in Craft Lodges S Masonic Rooms in the City 5 Reviews S Masonic Notes and Queries S REPORTS OF MASONIC

MEETINGSCraft Masonry 6 Instruction 8 Kuights Templar 8 The Theatres 9 Music 9 Science and Art 9 Masonic and General Tidings 10 Lodge Meetings for Next Week ... Page 3 Cover .

Ar00901

A NEW YEAR 1 Such is the fact with which we greet our numerous friends in all portions of the world , as we appear in this , the first issue for 1883 , of the Freemason . 1 SS 2 has passed away , and 1883 has put in its appearance . We have left behind us another milestone on our journey , and are moving on to-day amid all those doubts and uncertainties of a coming future , which

constitute our normal condition , rather so peculiar a characteristic , of our own limited knowledge here . And yet , though some affect to complain of their own ignorance of what advancing time has in store for us and ours ; though some , in all ages , have sought vainly and perversely to pry into the hidden realities of existence , and to forecast and foretell what is confessedly beyond

their ken , yet , on the whole , we are , and ought to be , satisfied , that this very condition of human ignorance and uncertainty has its good side , nay , its positive advantages for us all . What should any of us be the bettter or the worse , or the happier , for knowing the actual result of earthly strivings ? the disappointment of lawful hopes ? the overthrow of fair expectations' !

Should any of us , we make bold to ask , find happiness in realizing now the eventual reversal of early promise , or the utter annihilation of our golden dreams ? If any of our readers think that such actual and certain knowledge of what is now hidden from our view by the impenetrable veil which is cast by a kind Providence over all beyond our very present , would be good for

them , or do them service , or give them one iota of happiness , they are either self-deceived , we beg respectfully to observe , or profoundly ignorant of what , after all , constitutes the true secret and real meaning of life . It is this entirely imperfect acquaintance with what lies before us , on the contrary which constitutes the spur to exertion , the incentive to hope , which nerves us to

slrugglc , and forbids us to despair , and which serves above all to throw around the somewhat depressing shiftiness of mortal existence those brighter associations of faith , and trust , and duty , which offer such attractions to loyal hearts , and supply such unwavering confidence to thoughtful minds . Let us not then complain of what we know not and cannot know now , because we

do not know it ; but rather , as year follows upon year , and the great River of Time wends on its way , if sinuously here and there , to the still greater Ocean of Eternity , let us only look on the passing hour as our own , and seek to make provision for that more real and lasting epoch , when Time itself has passed away , and has ceased to influence the hopes and fears , the joys and sorrows . ., the lives and deaths of us poor children of the dust .

* - * ENGLISH Freemasonry begins in another year of the civil calendar with ils wonted efforts for charity , with its careful performance of those allotted duties which attend on the election of our officers and the installation of our Worshipful Masters . The Royal Masonic Benevolent Institution is now

specially before us again with its very many claims on our zeal , our sympathy , and our aid . The first meeting of the Board of Stewards took place this very week , and a fresh call is therefore made on our thoughtful and benevolent Order , to give their valuable and hearty support to that excellent , well-managed Charity of our English Craft . It is impossible to

overrate its need or its value ; it is beyond any one's power to exaggerate thc real good it seeks to do , and docs , in truth , so effectively accomplish . The thought has often occurred to us , as , perhaps , it has to others , how sad it is to realize the large number of necessarily disappointed candidates who seek for the availing , if modest , help this good Institution so

liberally yet unostentatiously bestows on our decayed brethren , and on their widows ? We venture to think that if at this season of thc year , when our hearts are open , the claims of this , the youngest , but not thc least necessary or beneficent in its results of our noble Institutions , were pressed by W . Ms , on the attention of their brethren , a large amount of

subscriptions generally would be remitted to the head office , and we should be able to try and reduce that long list of often weary and suffering applicants , which at present transcends the normal means of the Charity to meet or assist . If there is a successful festival , if the worthy Stewards bring up large returns , ( as we doubt not , so intrinsically good and patently urgent are the claims of the Royal Masonic Benevolent Institution , ) then there is

Ar00902

no doubt also but that the Managing Committee will recommend to the annual meeting to increase the number of candidates to be elected . We are not insensible to the possible danger of doing too much , of too

hastily increasing our benefits and our obligations , which may bring out still more numerous claims , but there can be no harm in urging on all our readers and brethren to put their " shoulders to the wheel , " and combine to make the anniversary of this admirable Charity another and a very signal success .

* * THE presentation of his portrait to Bro . J AMES TERRY , together with Masonic clothing , and a bracelet to Mrs . TERRY , fully recorded in our last issue , deserves an editorial allusion in the first pages of the-Freemason for 18 S 3 . Bro . TAMES TERRY is well known to a wide circle of friends and

brethren as the indefatigable and successful Secretary of the Royal Masonic Benevolent Institution , and as a very effective worker in the ceremonial of Freemasonry , and we know how ready he is to help his brethren , and how admirably he does his work . The proceedings of the presentation seem to have been most propitious and pleasant , and marked by all

true Masonic feeling and hearty good will , from first to last . Some of the facts mentioned by Bro . TERRY in his effective and modest reply call , it seems to us , for special attention and notice . In twenty years the annuities have increased very nearly five-fold . They amounted then to £ 2600 , they are now £ 11 , 600 . Twenty years ago , the annuitants numbered ninety-one ,

they are now 325 . And , whereas the annuities then wcre on a sort of- *' sliding scale , the highest man receiving £ " 36 , thc lowest £ 15 , and the highest widow £ 25 , and thc lowest £ 15 , all thc men now receive £ 40 , and all the widows £ 32 , per annum . " Then , " to use Bro . TERRY ' S own remarkable words , * ' the investments amounted to something like £ 32 , 000 , they are now

£ 64 , 000 ; so , whilst we have widened thc basis of our operations , we have doubled our reserve fund , and have still gone on and been able lo increase the number of recipients . " Surely , these are notable results , and for them Bro . J AMES TERRY must fairly and honestly be credited with a very large

share indeed , in respect of such able and enlightened management , such striking and satisfactory figures . We shall all echo Bro .. RAYNHAM STEWART ' S words , —that Bro . TERRY may long live to witness the result of his meritorious exertions , and enjoy the honest approval of all his brethren and the kindly congratulations of his many friends .

* * AN esteemed Provincial Correspondent has called attention to a paragraph in some recent correspondence respecting provincial promotion , which he thinks is an improper one to have been inserted . Had our Correspondent as much experience as we have , he would have known that there

is nothing so difficult to control as Masonic correspondence . We are inclined ourselves to think that such paragraphs are innocuous , in that they find , like water , their own level , and while it may be a matter of regret that some brethren should condescend to use them , it is far better policy to allow

comp lainants to state their own case , and then ignore evident exaggeration . Our own experience of provincial promotion , which is not a limited one , is quite contrary to that of recent correspondence . We feel certain that all such patronage is fairly dispensed , with a desire to do full justice to all legitimate claims . * 1 » 1 C 11 U 13 > , 1 ;

* ± As WE remarked in the last Freemason , the tolals ' of Masonic Charity for 1882 , when summed up at the close of the year , far exceed the festival receipts . During 1 SS 2 they amount to the large sum of £ 47 , 444 iSs . 1 id ., the highest year so far being 1880 , when the amount raised was only £ 237

short of £ 50 , 000 , or £ 49 , 763- I" 1882 , the Royal Masonic Benevolent Institution raised from all sources £ 16 , 595 7 S- 7 d ., though this sum includes , it it fair to observe , a donation from Grand Lodge of £ 1200 . The Girls ' School collected £ 15 , 9 6 9 15 s . 8 d ., and the Boys' School is credited with

£ 14 , 879 15 s . 8 d ., in all , as we said before , £ 47 , 444 iSs . 1 id . This isa fact worth a great many fine speeches , which the most perverse impugner of Freemasonry cannot deny , which the most snarling cynic cannot controvert . It fitly closes thc year 1 SS 2 . It has fitly begun for our good English Craft the New Year of 1 S 83 .

* * THE death of M . LEON GAMBETTA , with . the expiring old year , has filled thc columns of our contemporaries both in England and France ,

indeed , in all lands , with lengthy articles of praise or blame , admiration or depreciation . The general tone of these notices is laudatory of the deceased . Some , however , of these posthumous memoirs , especiall y by extreme writers , are sad to read , as in the very worst possible taste , and as

“The Freemason: 1883-01-06, Page 9” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 16 Aug. 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fvl/issues/fvl_06011883/page/9/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
Untitled Article 2
Untitled Article 3
PREFACE. Article 4
INDEX. Article 5
CONTENTS. Article 9
Untitled Article 9
MASONIC BENEVOLENCE IN 1882. Article 10
ENGLISH MASONRY IN EGYPT. Article 10
NEW YEAR'S ENTERTAINMENT AT CROYDON. Article 11
Jflai'ft JHasonrg. Article 11
1882 AND 1883. Article 11
Presentations. Article 11
Obituary. Article 11
Untitled Ad 12
Untitled Ad 12
Untitled Ad 12
Untitled Ad 12
Untitled Ad 12
Untitled Ad 12
Untitled Ad 12
Untitled Ad 12
Untitled Ad 12
Untitled Ad 12
Untitled Ad 12
Untitled Ad 12
Untitled Ad 12
Untitled Article 12
Original Correspondence. Article 12
REVIEWS Article 13
Masonic Notes and Queries. Article 13
REPORTS OF MASONIC MEETINGS. Article 14
Knights Templar. Article 16
THE THEATRES. Article 17
MUSIC Article 17
SCIENCE AND ART. Article 17
MASONIC AND GENERAL TIDINGS Article 18
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Contents.

CONTENTS .

LEADERS x Masonic Benevolence in 1882 2 English Masonry in Egpyt ¦ 2 New Year ' s Entertainment at Croydon 3 Mark Masonry 3

18 S 3 and 1 S 83 3 Presentations 3 Obituary 3 CORRESPONDENCEFreemasonry and Volunteering 4 Freemasonry in China 5 Remuneration of OHicers 5 A Visit to the Bovs' School S

CORRESPONDENCE —( Continued)—Candles in Craft Lodges S Masonic Rooms in the City 5 Reviews S Masonic Notes and Queries S REPORTS OF MASONIC

MEETINGSCraft Masonry 6 Instruction 8 Kuights Templar 8 The Theatres 9 Music 9 Science and Art 9 Masonic and General Tidings 10 Lodge Meetings for Next Week ... Page 3 Cover .

Ar00901

A NEW YEAR 1 Such is the fact with which we greet our numerous friends in all portions of the world , as we appear in this , the first issue for 1883 , of the Freemason . 1 SS 2 has passed away , and 1883 has put in its appearance . We have left behind us another milestone on our journey , and are moving on to-day amid all those doubts and uncertainties of a coming future , which

constitute our normal condition , rather so peculiar a characteristic , of our own limited knowledge here . And yet , though some affect to complain of their own ignorance of what advancing time has in store for us and ours ; though some , in all ages , have sought vainly and perversely to pry into the hidden realities of existence , and to forecast and foretell what is confessedly beyond

their ken , yet , on the whole , we are , and ought to be , satisfied , that this very condition of human ignorance and uncertainty has its good side , nay , its positive advantages for us all . What should any of us be the bettter or the worse , or the happier , for knowing the actual result of earthly strivings ? the disappointment of lawful hopes ? the overthrow of fair expectations' !

Should any of us , we make bold to ask , find happiness in realizing now the eventual reversal of early promise , or the utter annihilation of our golden dreams ? If any of our readers think that such actual and certain knowledge of what is now hidden from our view by the impenetrable veil which is cast by a kind Providence over all beyond our very present , would be good for

them , or do them service , or give them one iota of happiness , they are either self-deceived , we beg respectfully to observe , or profoundly ignorant of what , after all , constitutes the true secret and real meaning of life . It is this entirely imperfect acquaintance with what lies before us , on the contrary which constitutes the spur to exertion , the incentive to hope , which nerves us to

slrugglc , and forbids us to despair , and which serves above all to throw around the somewhat depressing shiftiness of mortal existence those brighter associations of faith , and trust , and duty , which offer such attractions to loyal hearts , and supply such unwavering confidence to thoughtful minds . Let us not then complain of what we know not and cannot know now , because we

do not know it ; but rather , as year follows upon year , and the great River of Time wends on its way , if sinuously here and there , to the still greater Ocean of Eternity , let us only look on the passing hour as our own , and seek to make provision for that more real and lasting epoch , when Time itself has passed away , and has ceased to influence the hopes and fears , the joys and sorrows . ., the lives and deaths of us poor children of the dust .

* - * ENGLISH Freemasonry begins in another year of the civil calendar with ils wonted efforts for charity , with its careful performance of those allotted duties which attend on the election of our officers and the installation of our Worshipful Masters . The Royal Masonic Benevolent Institution is now

specially before us again with its very many claims on our zeal , our sympathy , and our aid . The first meeting of the Board of Stewards took place this very week , and a fresh call is therefore made on our thoughtful and benevolent Order , to give their valuable and hearty support to that excellent , well-managed Charity of our English Craft . It is impossible to

overrate its need or its value ; it is beyond any one's power to exaggerate thc real good it seeks to do , and docs , in truth , so effectively accomplish . The thought has often occurred to us , as , perhaps , it has to others , how sad it is to realize the large number of necessarily disappointed candidates who seek for the availing , if modest , help this good Institution so

liberally yet unostentatiously bestows on our decayed brethren , and on their widows ? We venture to think that if at this season of thc year , when our hearts are open , the claims of this , the youngest , but not thc least necessary or beneficent in its results of our noble Institutions , were pressed by W . Ms , on the attention of their brethren , a large amount of

subscriptions generally would be remitted to the head office , and we should be able to try and reduce that long list of often weary and suffering applicants , which at present transcends the normal means of the Charity to meet or assist . If there is a successful festival , if the worthy Stewards bring up large returns , ( as we doubt not , so intrinsically good and patently urgent are the claims of the Royal Masonic Benevolent Institution , ) then there is

Ar00902

no doubt also but that the Managing Committee will recommend to the annual meeting to increase the number of candidates to be elected . We are not insensible to the possible danger of doing too much , of too

hastily increasing our benefits and our obligations , which may bring out still more numerous claims , but there can be no harm in urging on all our readers and brethren to put their " shoulders to the wheel , " and combine to make the anniversary of this admirable Charity another and a very signal success .

* * THE presentation of his portrait to Bro . J AMES TERRY , together with Masonic clothing , and a bracelet to Mrs . TERRY , fully recorded in our last issue , deserves an editorial allusion in the first pages of the-Freemason for 18 S 3 . Bro . TAMES TERRY is well known to a wide circle of friends and

brethren as the indefatigable and successful Secretary of the Royal Masonic Benevolent Institution , and as a very effective worker in the ceremonial of Freemasonry , and we know how ready he is to help his brethren , and how admirably he does his work . The proceedings of the presentation seem to have been most propitious and pleasant , and marked by all

true Masonic feeling and hearty good will , from first to last . Some of the facts mentioned by Bro . TERRY in his effective and modest reply call , it seems to us , for special attention and notice . In twenty years the annuities have increased very nearly five-fold . They amounted then to £ 2600 , they are now £ 11 , 600 . Twenty years ago , the annuitants numbered ninety-one ,

they are now 325 . And , whereas the annuities then wcre on a sort of- *' sliding scale , the highest man receiving £ " 36 , thc lowest £ 15 , and the highest widow £ 25 , and thc lowest £ 15 , all thc men now receive £ 40 , and all the widows £ 32 , per annum . " Then , " to use Bro . TERRY ' S own remarkable words , * ' the investments amounted to something like £ 32 , 000 , they are now

£ 64 , 000 ; so , whilst we have widened thc basis of our operations , we have doubled our reserve fund , and have still gone on and been able lo increase the number of recipients . " Surely , these are notable results , and for them Bro . J AMES TERRY must fairly and honestly be credited with a very large

share indeed , in respect of such able and enlightened management , such striking and satisfactory figures . We shall all echo Bro .. RAYNHAM STEWART ' S words , —that Bro . TERRY may long live to witness the result of his meritorious exertions , and enjoy the honest approval of all his brethren and the kindly congratulations of his many friends .

* * AN esteemed Provincial Correspondent has called attention to a paragraph in some recent correspondence respecting provincial promotion , which he thinks is an improper one to have been inserted . Had our Correspondent as much experience as we have , he would have known that there

is nothing so difficult to control as Masonic correspondence . We are inclined ourselves to think that such paragraphs are innocuous , in that they find , like water , their own level , and while it may be a matter of regret that some brethren should condescend to use them , it is far better policy to allow

comp lainants to state their own case , and then ignore evident exaggeration . Our own experience of provincial promotion , which is not a limited one , is quite contrary to that of recent correspondence . We feel certain that all such patronage is fairly dispensed , with a desire to do full justice to all legitimate claims . * 1 » 1 C 11 U 13 > , 1 ;

* ± As WE remarked in the last Freemason , the tolals ' of Masonic Charity for 1882 , when summed up at the close of the year , far exceed the festival receipts . During 1 SS 2 they amount to the large sum of £ 47 , 444 iSs . 1 id ., the highest year so far being 1880 , when the amount raised was only £ 237

short of £ 50 , 000 , or £ 49 , 763- I" 1882 , the Royal Masonic Benevolent Institution raised from all sources £ 16 , 595 7 S- 7 d ., though this sum includes , it it fair to observe , a donation from Grand Lodge of £ 1200 . The Girls ' School collected £ 15 , 9 6 9 15 s . 8 d ., and the Boys' School is credited with

£ 14 , 879 15 s . 8 d ., in all , as we said before , £ 47 , 444 iSs . 1 id . This isa fact worth a great many fine speeches , which the most perverse impugner of Freemasonry cannot deny , which the most snarling cynic cannot controvert . It fitly closes thc year 1 SS 2 . It has fitly begun for our good English Craft the New Year of 1 S 83 .

* * THE death of M . LEON GAMBETTA , with . the expiring old year , has filled thc columns of our contemporaries both in England and France ,

indeed , in all lands , with lengthy articles of praise or blame , admiration or depreciation . The general tone of these notices is laudatory of the deceased . Some , however , of these posthumous memoirs , especiall y by extreme writers , are sad to read , as in the very worst possible taste , and as

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