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  • July 6, 1889
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The Freemason, July 6, 1889: Page 13

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    Article Correspondence. ← Page 2 of 2
    Article THE CEREMONY OF INSTALLATION. Page 1 of 1
    Article THE POET BURNS. Page 1 of 1
    Article THE POET BURNS. Page 1 of 1
    Article POLITICAL FREEMASONS. Page 1 of 1
    Article POLITICAL FREEMASONS. Page 1 of 1
    Article Masonic Notes and Queries. Page 1 of 1
Page 13

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Correspondence.

¦ ' " " „ . kes as Secretary , has done in behalf of the llro- 1 ? ,. ' now consistently , and with honour , Sc ' nd and condemn them without benefit of clergy , ( urn { h , ' happened since his last testimonial was Nothing „ ' esented to him at the Crystal palace—not a publicly r er testimonial , but one organised by a li ° lt ! a " t " of which the Earl of Lathom , Dep . G . Master C -T '" hnd was President—except the proposed inquiry ot , , ' ' of the boy Motion , which led to scenes of '" "I H ' ^ o-raceful violence at sundry Courtsand Committee s , Vws ' last year . and is the C ! l , lse of tne present rl feelin " - which is to be found exhibited by some 1 en towards Bro . Binckes . But I cannot believe \ I this solitary incident , even if it were possible to ffi •the blame for its occurrence to Bro . Binckes , will f ( lowed , by men of honour and repute , to weigh ' -f HIP services which he has rendered and they . iCi Urisi . Ul ^ / ,. have recognised so recently . r th'uik you for your courtesy in allotting so much of : Ur valuable space to my letters , and remain , faithfully W fraternally ,

The Ceremony Of Installation.

THE CEREMONY OF INSTALLATION .

To the Editor of the "Freemason . " Dear Sir and Brother , Bro . Sadler , in his " Notes on the Ceremony of Installation , " has given a large amount of evidence as to the "use" adopted by the " Board of Installation" in 1827 . On so important a point it is desirable

to have as much testimony as possible , especially as every succeeding year adds to the difficulty of tracing directly the practice of brethren taught by that Board . On page 23 of Bro . Sadler's book is a list of those who signed the attendance sheet at its different meetings . Observing among these the name of Bro . C . Geary ,

who was subsequently for many years the recognised authority in my native Province of Hereford , it occurred to . me that there were probably still P . M . ' s in Hereford who were installed by him , and could give their recollections of his ritual . I am glad to learn on .. nniiirv that three survive , one of whom , the present

Prov . G . Secretary , was installed by him in 1 S 7 8 , the last ceremony he ever took . Bro . Earle has kindly given me the testimony of himself and the other two P . M . ' s that Bro . Geary used no ceremony whatever , beyond the declaration in use at the Lodge of Emulation . The recollection of these three brethren is very distinct ,

varying only as to the verbal question whether the word " open " was used . Two of them believe that it was not . I was myself installed by a brother , now deceased , who prided himself upon his adherence in the ceremonies " as Geary used to do them . " Bro . Geary himself was a purist even to words and

letters in ritual , and allowed no variations to pass unchallenged . His practice is , therefore , good evidence us to the form laid down by the " Board of Installation . " ! shall be obliged if you will allow me , through your columns , to add this additional " note" to those which have been so carefully and industriously collected by Bro . Sadler . —Yours fraternally , J . BODENHAM . 3 " ! July .

The Poet Burns.

THE POET BURNS .

To the Editor of the Freemason , Dear Sir and Brother , With reference to the letter of the author of the History of the Canongate Kilwinning Lodge , No . 2 ( S . C . ) , which appeared in the Freemason of the 1 st

June , I have to express my regret that , if he thinks that more could be said in support of the statement that Burns held the office of its Poet Laureate , he should not have mentioned the facts to which he refers . ' however , feel assured that nothing more of impor-¦ ance can be said .

' knew of Allan Cunningham's statement in his Life ° ' Burns to which Bro . Mackenzie refers ; and to enable your readers to judge of the value of that state"l e , | t as supporting Bro . Mackenzie ' s assertion , I here imote

itv' , •:. dinDUr gh had still another class of genteel con'vulists , to whom the Poet was attracted by principles ' ell as b y pleasure ; these were the relics of that T . "" merous body , the Jacobites , who still loved to "wish the feelings of birth or education rather than of hist T ^ ' toasted the name of s t " . when the Uir f race ' renounced his pretensions to a , "'" ' * the sake of peace and the cross . Young met I ^ * "g h names were among them , annually Whirl " *! , , Pretender ' s . birthday , and sang songs in uW White Rose of Jacobitism flourished ; toasted

Hnic ? uncln g adherence to the main line of the uf . ? and the Stuart , and listened to the strains < n uri 1 l r " . eate 0 I the day , who prophesied 'he rilf dlsmissal of the intrusive Hanoverian , by line . B ^ might 0 I the rig hteous and disinherited ivho ' su f H ttlS ' ^ ° descended from a northern race , more " ' Was sus P ected of having drawn the clay-Marisrh I 74 S , v h ° loved the bl ' ood of the

Keith-, iiiarche l un r whose banners his ancestors had senti \ . readi } y united himself to a . band in whose Was rece / 0 - ' tlCal and social > he was a sriarer - He WiLS con / Wltl 1 acclamation , the dignity of Laureate w hich L erred u P ° n him , and his inauguration ode , in Grahams ! : ? called the names and the deeds of the u ' : is aimK , „ Erskines , the Boyds , and the Gordons , n 'aucled for its fire , as well as for its sentiments . "

The Poet Burns.

There is nothing in the above statement which warrants Bro . Mackenzie ' s contention . Cunningham does not say that the Jacobites met in the lodge room of the Canongate Kilwinning Lodge , and Bro . Mackenzie does not give his authority for saying that they did so . The Jacobites of Scotland cannot be identified with the

Freemasons of Scotland , nor with the Lodge Canongate Kilwinning . They were a political , and not a Masonic bodv ; and the leading members of the lodge , at the period in question , were connected politically , not with the Jacobite , but with the Whig party , and some were leaders of the Whigs in Scotland . Besides , according

to the above extract , the Jacobites met annually only , not monthly , or more frequently , as was the custom of the Lodge Canongate Kilwinning . Bro . Mackenzie , in support of his contention , further states that Bro . Anthony O'Neal Hay , in 186 3 , held the office of Poet Laureate of the lodge , and had stated

that the office was instituted to do honour to Robert Burns . " But Bro ! Hay was a very young man in 1863 . He only joined the Craft in 1859 . He possessed some Masonic literary tastes ; but he had no personal knowledge of the matter in question , and he does not give any authority for his statement . It is thus valueless .

Bro . Mackenzie reflects on me referring to Marshall s work as an authority against him . But I have done so because he adopted that work as giving an authentic narrative of the occurrence ( History , p . 122 ) , and as one whose statements " could not be impugned " ( History , p . 119 ) . Besides , Marshall's work was published

under the direct authority of the lodge deliberatel y g iven . ( History , p . 122 ) . Bro . Mackenzie thus repudiates Bro . Marshall as an authority ! On what other authority does he now rely to instruct his contention ? He states ( 1 ) that his chapter on " Burns is based on the lodge minutes . " In

this I have already shown that he is mistaken , for there are no such minutes narrating the election and inauguration of Burns as Poet Laureate of the lodge , and Bro . Mackenzie himself admits that the lodge minutes are silent on the subject until 1815 , and there is nothing in them until then countenancing

the assertion that Burns held the office . ( 2 ) Bro . Mackenzie next states that Bro . William Petrie , who was joint Ty ler of Grand Lodge , rSi l-i 8 r 8 , and assistant Grand Tyler , 1838-1845 , and Janitor of the Supreme Royal Arch Chapter , and Tyler of the Lodge No . 1 , at his death , which occurred prior to November , 184 s ,

" bore oral testimony to the fact of the inauguration , as having been present on the occasion . " But on what authority does Bro . Mackenzie make that assertion ? I know of none , except a statement in his own hibtory ( page 122 ) where it is stated that Petrie had said he was " present at the inauguration of Burns as Poet

Laureate , and" the historian ' s informant "had heard from his ( Petrie ' s ) lips many interesting reminiscences of the Poet , and of events which had occurred in the lodge when there in company with him ; " and it is added that Bro . William Campbell , " who was for many years a member of Canongate Kilwinning , " . . " had

similar recollections of Burns 1 " Now , if the statement as to Bro . Petrie be tested by the accuracy of the writer ' s statement as to Campbell , it is manifestly incorrect , for I showed in my last letter that Cam pbell was a boy in'his eleventh year in 1787 , and could not have been admitted into the lodge , and could not have had

any such similar recollections of the Poet . Then again , Petrie was not a member of the Lodge Canongate Kilwinning , at least he is not recorded in Grand Lodge books as such ; and I have already shown that Burns could have only attended the Lodge Canongate Kilwinning on two , certainly not more than three , occasions .

Marshall himself limits his account of Burns' attendance at the lodge to the winter session of 1786—178 7 , and the March meeting was the last of that session . From my own researches I am satisfied Burns attended one meeting only—the February meeting—of the lodge in 1787 . The minutes bear no record of his attendance

on any other occasion . But it is immaterial whether Petrie made the statement referred to or not , for the facts and circumstances already detailed in this controversy show it to be untrue . If Burns attended the lodge so seldom , and if Petrie was not a member of it , he had no opportunity to form " interesting

reminiscences" of the Poet , and of " events " connected with him occurring within it . His statement is not corroborated in any way . His name is not mentioned in any of the Burns' literature , and , so far as I can discover , he had no intercourse with the Poet , and , above all , no such occurrence is recorded in the lodge ' s

minutes , nor is there reference to such an event in other quarters , in which it would , had it happened , unquestionably have appeared . The matter , too , would not have rested on the " oral testimony " of a single individual , especially one of Petrie ' s social and Masonic status , had it had an existence . —Yours fraternally , WILLIAM OFFICER , P . G . D . of Scotland .

Political Freemasons.

POLITICAL FREEMASONS .

To the Editor of the Freemason , Dear Sir and Brother , One great boast of the Craft has always been the right of visiting . I have heard objection raised on

the ground of a feeling which is supposed , I trust wrongly—I have never found it—to exist in many London lodges , that it is not good form to visit without an invitation , to lodges confined to a particular profession , or particular body of men , as it is thought that lodges of this class would be more inclined to resent the

Political Freemasons.

"intrusion" of an uninvited brother . But a political lodge ! I trust , that the brethren when holding their informal meeting , will recognise the fact that however innocent their intentions , they will be putting a grave stumbling-block in the way of weaker brethren should they persist in their intention of asking for a charter .

Some short time back the brethren of a lodge I know , wished to move to more commodious quarters . A club and assembly rooms were being built in the town by a company , under the auspices-of a political party , and suggestions were made that a lodge room should be built with a separate entrance on a part of the company ' s premises . Almost every member of the lodge

belonged to that party , and , 1 believe , most were shareholders in the company , but the idea was held absolutely impossible , on the ground that , " as Masons , we must not even in name appear to be mixed up with any political association . " I most fraternally venture to hope that wiser counsels may prevail , and the application will not be made .

—Yours fraternally , "MASONRY NON POLITICAL " 30 th June .

Masonic Notes And Queries.

Masonic Notes and Queries .

E—assac ¦ ' ' 11 ^ —Baaas ^^ Mgaaww ^ 843 ] CURIOUS SILVER JEWEL .

In the Catalogue of the Masonic Exhibition , Shanklin ( 1886 ) , will be found the following description of Exhibit 1358 , belonging to Bro . J . S . Cumberland's remarkable collection : " Curious silver jewel , consisting of compasses , resting on a square ( once used by a W . M . ) , and above is a ' Sailor ' s Knife , ' opened across the former working tool . "

This jewel has always been a mystery , until a few weeks since , when , looking through Bro . George Kenning ' s very striking catalogue of " Banners , Clothing , and Medals for all Societies , " I at once detected the same design in the series of illustrations representing the " Ancient Order of Free Gardeners , " so that the

instrument is doubtless a pruning knife , and the article is described as an emblem of that society , so does not belong to the Freemasons . Other societies also have adopted some of our symbols , so that a little caution will sometimes be necessary in estimating the uses of certain jewels . Under the " Odd Fellows "

are not a few that would pass as Masonic , especially the level for Past G . P . ' s , the Treasurer ' s and the Secretary ' s jewels . Then the apron of the " Free Gardeners " is almost the same in shape as the lodges use under the Scottish Grand Lodge , and one of the

handsome banners of the " Loyal Orange Association , " g iven in the work aforesaid , has the " five-pointed star " enclosing the letter G prominently depicted on a keystone to an arch , resting on two pillars , and the ark also is a conspicuous figure .

W . J . HUGHAN . 844 ] IRISH MASONRY IN THE LAST CENTURY .

From the " Limerick Directory , " 1769 . Masters and Wardens of the different lodges of Freemasons , Deputy Grand Lodge , meet the second Tuesday in February , May , August , and November , at five o ' clock in the evening , at the house of Richard Dillore , near the Market House .

Rev . Dan . Widenham , Master . Tames Clanchy , M-D . ) ,,, , Richard Dillon , ) Wardens . James O'DonnelJ , Treasurer . Edmond Casey , Secretary .

Lodge . Meeting . Master . Wardens . Treas . Sec . Chap . No . i ) . 34 th every George William Joseph "John Rev . G . month at Davis . Hartney . Johns . Crone . Roche . King ' sHd . Samuel Tavern . Johns . No . ij . 1 st Monday every John Jas . Annmontli at Stephens , strong ,

House ot Joseph A . Frasier Kean . in Barrack Street . No . 36 . 1 st Wed- Timothy lulimuul nesday in Ryan . Vokes , T . every mtli . Harrison , at House

ot George Bell 011 Baal ' s Bridge . N 0 . 116 . 1 st Thurs- William Jeremiah day in Martin . Hayes , every mth . William at house of Wallace .

Richard Dillon nr . the Market House . No . 236 . 1 st Tues- Thomas l . ukc day i n Rouse . Tyrrell , every mth . Patrick at House Glynn , of William

Hull near the Parade N 0 . 371 . 1 st Tues- Philip J . Ryan , day in Bennis . Humphry every mth . Holland , at house of Richard Dillon nr . Market I louse .

“The Freemason: 1889-07-06, Page 13” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 19 July 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fvl/issues/fvl_06071889/page/13/.
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THE BOYS' SCHOOL FESTIVAL. Article 1
FESTIVAL OF THE MARK BENEVOLENT FUND. Article 1
MASONIC ARCHÆOLOGY. Article 1
MASONIC REPRINTS OF QUATUOR CORONATI, No. 2076. Article 1
ALBERT PIKE. Article 2
MASONRY'S WORK. Article 2
ROYAL MASONIC INSTITUTION FOR BOYS. Article 3
STEWARDS' LISTS. Article 4
ANALYSIS OF THE RETURNS. Article 5
PROVINCIAL GRAND LODGE OF MIDDLESEX. Article 8
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To Correspondents. Article 11
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THE CEREMONY OF INSTALLATION. Article 13
THE POET BURNS. Article 13
POLITICAL FREEMASONS. Article 13
Masonic Notes and Queries. Article 13
REPORTS OF MASONIC MEETINGS. Article 14
Provincial Meetings. Article 15
Royal Arch. Article 16
Mark Masonry. Article 16
Knights Templar. Article 16
Ancient and Accepted Rite. Article 17
Order of the Secret Monitor. Article 17
Lodges and Chapters of Instruction. Article 17
ROYAL MASONIC INSTITUTION FOR BOYS . Article 18
OPENING OF NEW MASONIC HALL AT SITTINGBOURNE. Article 18
PROVINCE OF STAFFORDSHIRE. Article 19
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BRO. HUGHAN'S FORTHCOMING WORK. Article 19
BRO. JEHANGIR H. KOTHARI. Article 19
AN EXPLANATION. Article 19
THE LONDON SCOTS LODGE. Article 19
MASONIC AND GENERAL TIDINGS Article 20
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Correspondence.

¦ ' " " „ . kes as Secretary , has done in behalf of the llro- 1 ? ,. ' now consistently , and with honour , Sc ' nd and condemn them without benefit of clergy , ( urn { h , ' happened since his last testimonial was Nothing „ ' esented to him at the Crystal palace—not a publicly r er testimonial , but one organised by a li ° lt ! a " t " of which the Earl of Lathom , Dep . G . Master C -T '" hnd was President—except the proposed inquiry ot , , ' ' of the boy Motion , which led to scenes of '" "I H ' ^ o-raceful violence at sundry Courtsand Committee s , Vws ' last year . and is the C ! l , lse of tne present rl feelin " - which is to be found exhibited by some 1 en towards Bro . Binckes . But I cannot believe \ I this solitary incident , even if it were possible to ffi •the blame for its occurrence to Bro . Binckes , will f ( lowed , by men of honour and repute , to weigh ' -f HIP services which he has rendered and they . iCi Urisi . Ul ^ / ,. have recognised so recently . r th'uik you for your courtesy in allotting so much of : Ur valuable space to my letters , and remain , faithfully W fraternally ,

The Ceremony Of Installation.

THE CEREMONY OF INSTALLATION .

To the Editor of the "Freemason . " Dear Sir and Brother , Bro . Sadler , in his " Notes on the Ceremony of Installation , " has given a large amount of evidence as to the "use" adopted by the " Board of Installation" in 1827 . On so important a point it is desirable

to have as much testimony as possible , especially as every succeeding year adds to the difficulty of tracing directly the practice of brethren taught by that Board . On page 23 of Bro . Sadler's book is a list of those who signed the attendance sheet at its different meetings . Observing among these the name of Bro . C . Geary ,

who was subsequently for many years the recognised authority in my native Province of Hereford , it occurred to . me that there were probably still P . M . ' s in Hereford who were installed by him , and could give their recollections of his ritual . I am glad to learn on .. nniiirv that three survive , one of whom , the present

Prov . G . Secretary , was installed by him in 1 S 7 8 , the last ceremony he ever took . Bro . Earle has kindly given me the testimony of himself and the other two P . M . ' s that Bro . Geary used no ceremony whatever , beyond the declaration in use at the Lodge of Emulation . The recollection of these three brethren is very distinct ,

varying only as to the verbal question whether the word " open " was used . Two of them believe that it was not . I was myself installed by a brother , now deceased , who prided himself upon his adherence in the ceremonies " as Geary used to do them . " Bro . Geary himself was a purist even to words and

letters in ritual , and allowed no variations to pass unchallenged . His practice is , therefore , good evidence us to the form laid down by the " Board of Installation . " ! shall be obliged if you will allow me , through your columns , to add this additional " note" to those which have been so carefully and industriously collected by Bro . Sadler . —Yours fraternally , J . BODENHAM . 3 " ! July .

The Poet Burns.

THE POET BURNS .

To the Editor of the Freemason , Dear Sir and Brother , With reference to the letter of the author of the History of the Canongate Kilwinning Lodge , No . 2 ( S . C . ) , which appeared in the Freemason of the 1 st

June , I have to express my regret that , if he thinks that more could be said in support of the statement that Burns held the office of its Poet Laureate , he should not have mentioned the facts to which he refers . ' however , feel assured that nothing more of impor-¦ ance can be said .

' knew of Allan Cunningham's statement in his Life ° ' Burns to which Bro . Mackenzie refers ; and to enable your readers to judge of the value of that state"l e , | t as supporting Bro . Mackenzie ' s assertion , I here imote

itv' , •:. dinDUr gh had still another class of genteel con'vulists , to whom the Poet was attracted by principles ' ell as b y pleasure ; these were the relics of that T . "" merous body , the Jacobites , who still loved to "wish the feelings of birth or education rather than of hist T ^ ' toasted the name of s t " . when the Uir f race ' renounced his pretensions to a , "'" ' * the sake of peace and the cross . Young met I ^ * "g h names were among them , annually Whirl " *! , , Pretender ' s . birthday , and sang songs in uW White Rose of Jacobitism flourished ; toasted

Hnic ? uncln g adherence to the main line of the uf . ? and the Stuart , and listened to the strains < n uri 1 l r " . eate 0 I the day , who prophesied 'he rilf dlsmissal of the intrusive Hanoverian , by line . B ^ might 0 I the rig hteous and disinherited ivho ' su f H ttlS ' ^ ° descended from a northern race , more " ' Was sus P ected of having drawn the clay-Marisrh I 74 S , v h ° loved the bl ' ood of the

Keith-, iiiarche l un r whose banners his ancestors had senti \ . readi } y united himself to a . band in whose Was rece / 0 - ' tlCal and social > he was a sriarer - He WiLS con / Wltl 1 acclamation , the dignity of Laureate w hich L erred u P ° n him , and his inauguration ode , in Grahams ! : ? called the names and the deeds of the u ' : is aimK , „ Erskines , the Boyds , and the Gordons , n 'aucled for its fire , as well as for its sentiments . "

The Poet Burns.

There is nothing in the above statement which warrants Bro . Mackenzie ' s contention . Cunningham does not say that the Jacobites met in the lodge room of the Canongate Kilwinning Lodge , and Bro . Mackenzie does not give his authority for saying that they did so . The Jacobites of Scotland cannot be identified with the

Freemasons of Scotland , nor with the Lodge Canongate Kilwinning . They were a political , and not a Masonic bodv ; and the leading members of the lodge , at the period in question , were connected politically , not with the Jacobite , but with the Whig party , and some were leaders of the Whigs in Scotland . Besides , according

to the above extract , the Jacobites met annually only , not monthly , or more frequently , as was the custom of the Lodge Canongate Kilwinning . Bro . Mackenzie , in support of his contention , further states that Bro . Anthony O'Neal Hay , in 186 3 , held the office of Poet Laureate of the lodge , and had stated

that the office was instituted to do honour to Robert Burns . " But Bro ! Hay was a very young man in 1863 . He only joined the Craft in 1859 . He possessed some Masonic literary tastes ; but he had no personal knowledge of the matter in question , and he does not give any authority for his statement . It is thus valueless .

Bro . Mackenzie reflects on me referring to Marshall s work as an authority against him . But I have done so because he adopted that work as giving an authentic narrative of the occurrence ( History , p . 122 ) , and as one whose statements " could not be impugned " ( History , p . 119 ) . Besides , Marshall's work was published

under the direct authority of the lodge deliberatel y g iven . ( History , p . 122 ) . Bro . Mackenzie thus repudiates Bro . Marshall as an authority ! On what other authority does he now rely to instruct his contention ? He states ( 1 ) that his chapter on " Burns is based on the lodge minutes . " In

this I have already shown that he is mistaken , for there are no such minutes narrating the election and inauguration of Burns as Poet Laureate of the lodge , and Bro . Mackenzie himself admits that the lodge minutes are silent on the subject until 1815 , and there is nothing in them until then countenancing

the assertion that Burns held the office . ( 2 ) Bro . Mackenzie next states that Bro . William Petrie , who was joint Ty ler of Grand Lodge , rSi l-i 8 r 8 , and assistant Grand Tyler , 1838-1845 , and Janitor of the Supreme Royal Arch Chapter , and Tyler of the Lodge No . 1 , at his death , which occurred prior to November , 184 s ,

" bore oral testimony to the fact of the inauguration , as having been present on the occasion . " But on what authority does Bro . Mackenzie make that assertion ? I know of none , except a statement in his own hibtory ( page 122 ) where it is stated that Petrie had said he was " present at the inauguration of Burns as Poet

Laureate , and" the historian ' s informant "had heard from his ( Petrie ' s ) lips many interesting reminiscences of the Poet , and of events which had occurred in the lodge when there in company with him ; " and it is added that Bro . William Campbell , " who was for many years a member of Canongate Kilwinning , " . . " had

similar recollections of Burns 1 " Now , if the statement as to Bro . Petrie be tested by the accuracy of the writer ' s statement as to Campbell , it is manifestly incorrect , for I showed in my last letter that Cam pbell was a boy in'his eleventh year in 1787 , and could not have been admitted into the lodge , and could not have had

any such similar recollections of the Poet . Then again , Petrie was not a member of the Lodge Canongate Kilwinning , at least he is not recorded in Grand Lodge books as such ; and I have already shown that Burns could have only attended the Lodge Canongate Kilwinning on two , certainly not more than three , occasions .

Marshall himself limits his account of Burns' attendance at the lodge to the winter session of 1786—178 7 , and the March meeting was the last of that session . From my own researches I am satisfied Burns attended one meeting only—the February meeting—of the lodge in 1787 . The minutes bear no record of his attendance

on any other occasion . But it is immaterial whether Petrie made the statement referred to or not , for the facts and circumstances already detailed in this controversy show it to be untrue . If Burns attended the lodge so seldom , and if Petrie was not a member of it , he had no opportunity to form " interesting

reminiscences" of the Poet , and of " events " connected with him occurring within it . His statement is not corroborated in any way . His name is not mentioned in any of the Burns' literature , and , so far as I can discover , he had no intercourse with the Poet , and , above all , no such occurrence is recorded in the lodge ' s

minutes , nor is there reference to such an event in other quarters , in which it would , had it happened , unquestionably have appeared . The matter , too , would not have rested on the " oral testimony " of a single individual , especially one of Petrie ' s social and Masonic status , had it had an existence . —Yours fraternally , WILLIAM OFFICER , P . G . D . of Scotland .

Political Freemasons.

POLITICAL FREEMASONS .

To the Editor of the Freemason , Dear Sir and Brother , One great boast of the Craft has always been the right of visiting . I have heard objection raised on

the ground of a feeling which is supposed , I trust wrongly—I have never found it—to exist in many London lodges , that it is not good form to visit without an invitation , to lodges confined to a particular profession , or particular body of men , as it is thought that lodges of this class would be more inclined to resent the

Political Freemasons.

"intrusion" of an uninvited brother . But a political lodge ! I trust , that the brethren when holding their informal meeting , will recognise the fact that however innocent their intentions , they will be putting a grave stumbling-block in the way of weaker brethren should they persist in their intention of asking for a charter .

Some short time back the brethren of a lodge I know , wished to move to more commodious quarters . A club and assembly rooms were being built in the town by a company , under the auspices-of a political party , and suggestions were made that a lodge room should be built with a separate entrance on a part of the company ' s premises . Almost every member of the lodge

belonged to that party , and , 1 believe , most were shareholders in the company , but the idea was held absolutely impossible , on the ground that , " as Masons , we must not even in name appear to be mixed up with any political association . " I most fraternally venture to hope that wiser counsels may prevail , and the application will not be made .

—Yours fraternally , "MASONRY NON POLITICAL " 30 th June .

Masonic Notes And Queries.

Masonic Notes and Queries .

E—assac ¦ ' ' 11 ^ —Baaas ^^ Mgaaww ^ 843 ] CURIOUS SILVER JEWEL .

In the Catalogue of the Masonic Exhibition , Shanklin ( 1886 ) , will be found the following description of Exhibit 1358 , belonging to Bro . J . S . Cumberland's remarkable collection : " Curious silver jewel , consisting of compasses , resting on a square ( once used by a W . M . ) , and above is a ' Sailor ' s Knife , ' opened across the former working tool . "

This jewel has always been a mystery , until a few weeks since , when , looking through Bro . George Kenning ' s very striking catalogue of " Banners , Clothing , and Medals for all Societies , " I at once detected the same design in the series of illustrations representing the " Ancient Order of Free Gardeners , " so that the

instrument is doubtless a pruning knife , and the article is described as an emblem of that society , so does not belong to the Freemasons . Other societies also have adopted some of our symbols , so that a little caution will sometimes be necessary in estimating the uses of certain jewels . Under the " Odd Fellows "

are not a few that would pass as Masonic , especially the level for Past G . P . ' s , the Treasurer ' s and the Secretary ' s jewels . Then the apron of the " Free Gardeners " is almost the same in shape as the lodges use under the Scottish Grand Lodge , and one of the

handsome banners of the " Loyal Orange Association , " g iven in the work aforesaid , has the " five-pointed star " enclosing the letter G prominently depicted on a keystone to an arch , resting on two pillars , and the ark also is a conspicuous figure .

W . J . HUGHAN . 844 ] IRISH MASONRY IN THE LAST CENTURY .

From the " Limerick Directory , " 1769 . Masters and Wardens of the different lodges of Freemasons , Deputy Grand Lodge , meet the second Tuesday in February , May , August , and November , at five o ' clock in the evening , at the house of Richard Dillore , near the Market House .

Rev . Dan . Widenham , Master . Tames Clanchy , M-D . ) ,,, , Richard Dillon , ) Wardens . James O'DonnelJ , Treasurer . Edmond Casey , Secretary .

Lodge . Meeting . Master . Wardens . Treas . Sec . Chap . No . i ) . 34 th every George William Joseph "John Rev . G . month at Davis . Hartney . Johns . Crone . Roche . King ' sHd . Samuel Tavern . Johns . No . ij . 1 st Monday every John Jas . Annmontli at Stephens , strong ,

House ot Joseph A . Frasier Kean . in Barrack Street . No . 36 . 1 st Wed- Timothy lulimuul nesday in Ryan . Vokes , T . every mtli . Harrison , at House

ot George Bell 011 Baal ' s Bridge . N 0 . 116 . 1 st Thurs- William Jeremiah day in Martin . Hayes , every mth . William at house of Wallace .

Richard Dillon nr . the Market House . No . 236 . 1 st Tues- Thomas l . ukc day i n Rouse . Tyrrell , every mth . Patrick at House Glynn , of William

Hull near the Parade N 0 . 371 . 1 st Tues- Philip J . Ryan , day in Bennis . Humphry every mth . Holland , at house of Richard Dillon nr . Market I louse .

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