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  • Oct. 7, 1876
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  • COSMOPOLITAN MASONIC CALENDAR.
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    Article COSMOPOLITAN MASONIC CALENDAR. Page 1 of 1
    Article Untitled Page 1 of 1
    Article TO OUR READERS. Page 1 of 1
    Article Answers to Correspondents. Page 1 of 1
    Article REMITTANCES RECEIVED. Page 1 of 1
    Article Births, Marriages, and Deaths. Page 1 of 1
    Article Untitled Page 1 of 1
    Article THE CANT OF MASONRY. Page 1 of 1
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    Article MASONIC ARCHÆOLOGY. Page 1 of 2 →
Page 6

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

Cosmopolitan Masonic Calendar.

COSMOPOLITAN MASONIC CALENDAR .

W . Masters and Secretaries are earnestly requested to forward to the publisher , at the Offices , 198 , Fleet-street , E . G ., particulars of the place , days , and months of meeting of their respective lodges , chapters , and other Masonic bodies , for insertion in the issue of the Calendar for 1877 .

Ar00601

IMPORTANT NOTICE .

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

It is very necessary for our readers to advise os 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 .

To Our Readers.

TO OUR READERS .

The Freemason is a sixteen-page 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 . Annual subscription in the United Kingdom , Post free , 10 / - P . O . O . ' s to be made payable at the chief office , London .

Answers To Correspondents.

Answers to Correspondents .

All Communications , Advertisements , & c , intended for insertion in the Number of the following Saturday , must reach the Office not later tnan 12 o ' clock on Wednesday morning . We do not undertake to return rejected communications ,

The following stand over : —Memorial to the late Bro . Wescoe ; Reports of Lodges , 893 , Millbrook ; 332 , Hadley ; 321 , Bonill ; Chapter 111 , Ardross in ; Mark Lodge , 14 6 , Lancaster ; Prov . G . Mark Lodge of Somerset ; Red Cross Conclave , 33 , Portsmouth .

Remittances Received.

REMITTANCES RECEIVED .

£ s- A . Adcock , Thos ., Montreal CP . O . O . ) 1 4 o Bate , O . H ., The Cape ( P . O . O . ) o 6 o Brady , H . S ., St . Helena ( P . O . O . ) o 7 o Brady , J ., Bermuda ( per Admiralty , Cash ) o 9 o Clnvtnn . Cant .. India fP . Ci . Q . \ o 11 o

Cruft , C , Indiana ( P . O . O . ) 1 1 o Cunningham , J ., Gibraltar ( P . O . O . ) 200 Dantes , S . Africa ( P . O . O . ) o 14 1 Dowling , R ., St . Helena ( P . O . O . ) o 13 9 Eichbaum , U . S . A . ( B . of E . ) 1 4 o Hayward , F . A ., Victoria ( Cash ) 1 o o Laurie . G .. Constantinople ( Cash ) o 12 o

Meyer , C . E ., U . S . A . ( Cheque ) o 12 o Peake , H . H ., Ballarat ( P . O . O . ) o 12 o Pickthrall , T . W ., S . Africa ( P . O . O . ) 1 4 o Simpson , W . H ., New Zealand ( P . O . O . ) 5 o o Stuart , D ., Peru ( Diaft ) 140 Sutton , Gen ., U . S . A ; ( B . of E . ) 3 o o Toby , C , Tasmania ( P . O . O . ) 200

Births, Marriages, And Deaths.

Births , Marriages , and Deaths .

[ The charge is 2 s . 6 d for announcements , not exceeding four lines , under this heading . ]

BIRTHS . APPLETON . —On the 29 th ult ., at Dan-y-Graig , Forest-hill , Mrs . Walter P . Appleton , 0 / a daughter . ARMSTRONG . —On the 28 th Aug ., at Meean Meer , Punjaub , the wife of the Rev . W . F . Armstrong , of a daughter . BROWN . —On the 25 th ult ., at Penn-fields , Wolverhampton , the wife of VV . A . Brown , of a son .

MARRIAGES . LANU—M'LELLAN . —On the 21 th ult ., at Blairvaddick , Row , Dumbartonshire , R . Hamilton Lang , Imperial Ottoman Bank , Bucharest , to Margaret , daughter of W . M'Lellan , Esq .

OVERTON—SANDERS . — . On the 25 th ult ., at St . Peter ' s Church , Brighton , by the Rev . R . E . H . Raines , Arthur , third son of Mr . J . T . Overton , of Sutton Lodge , Surrey , to Caroline Harriet , youngest daughter of the late Mr . W . S . Saunders , of Burstow Lodge , Surrey .

DEATHS . ALLEN . —On the 30 th ult ., at Newport , I . W ., John Allen , Esq ., aged 73 . BONCKY . —On the 24 th ult ., Bro . C . Boncey , Life Subsciiber to the Licensed Victuallers' Institution , and Steward of the " Albert Edward " Saloon Steamer , aged 56 . QIARIDGE . —On the 23 rd ult ., at 231 , Queen ' s-Road ,

Peckham , John Joseph Claridge , late of the Old Kentroad , in his 6 ist year . Durr . —On the 29 th ult ., at St . George ' s-Road , S . W ., aged 65 , Eleanor , widow of the late A . Duff , Esq . EAOIE . —On the 2 lnd ult ., Francis John Eadie , of 6 , Fleet-lane , Farringdon-street , aged 31 . EDMONDS . —On the ist inst ., at Hunter-street , Brunswick square , Harry Tarrant , son of Bro , T . W . Edmunds , aged five vears .

Ar00609

TheFreemason,SATURDAY , OCT . 7 , 1876 .

The Cant Of Masonry.

THE CANT OF MASONRY .

Such is the polite reading which the " Hampshire Post , " of September 22 nd , gives to its solitary and singular leader , which we print in another column for the information of our brethren . We shall all feel at once how polite it is and how true . It seems that the actual cause of

this intemperate and silly ebullition of a weak pen , and a weaker understanding , was the dedication of a new lodge at Havant , on the 1 st ult ., by our distinguished Bro . P . G . M . W . Beach , M . P ., and " notamment , " as the French say , a soeech delivered by Bro . Henry Ford . An account

of the proceedings and speeches appeared in our last impression , and we cannot , for the life of us , see what can possibly have aroused the indignation of our irate and unreasoning contemporary . We do not perceive that in anything which Bro . Beach , according to his wont , well said ,

or Bro . Ford addressed to his brethren , there is any ground for faultfinding , or complaint . We , of course , are never bound by the "dicta" of individual speakers , and had Bro . Ford ( he seems to be the chief offender in our contemporary ' s "jaundiced eye" ) proclaimed anything contrary

to Masonic tenets , we should not have defended his utterances , simply because he was a Freemason . But we confess that we are at a loss to understand what it is which our contemporary has really to animadvert upon . He may not like Freemasons , he may not approve of

Freemasonry . Some do not ; but at any rate he may be civil in his epithets and reasonable in his remarks . We do not quite gather , after more than one perusal , what it is even which he is p leased to term the " Cant of Masonry . " Is it Bro . Beach ' s truthful declaration that we were

once an operative body , and are now a speculative body ? Or is it Bro . Ford ' s assertion that we are loyal , peaceable , and patriotic , tolerant , truthful , and benevolent ? The writer of this childish article seems to have got into his noddle , ( not , we fancy , a very strong one , by this

specimen of his writing ) , that somehow or other Freemasonry is used by Freemasons for the purpose of private advantage , or personal advancement , and that by its secret organization Freemasons are enabled to favour one another at the expense alike of the public purse , and

individual merit . Greater nonsense never was penned , a grosser delusion per se never was fostered , or propagated by any one . After a long experience of Freemasonry we can safely assert that we have never known an instance where Freemasonry has been used for anyother purposes

than for those purely Masonic in themselves . Such a perversion of our system and teaching is forbidden by the first principles of our Order , and to state publicly that such is the " way " of the Masonic " world , " is alike contrary to truth , and a direct calumny on a very upright ,

conscientious , and patriotic body of men . Bro . Ford nowhere , that we see , claims for Freemasons any alleged superiority over other men . Neither does he , as the " Hampshire Post , " appears to fancy , assert for Freemasonry the " status" or influence of a " religion . " He

may possibly point out that Freemasonry inculcates loyalty to the sovereign and obedience to the laws of the state where Freemasons happen to be , that Freemasons are good citizens and true patriots , and that the unchanging teaching of Freemasonry is a pure morality , the morality of

the Bible , that morality without which the noisiest professions are worthless , and the most abstract speculations a snare . Why is Bro . Ford to be blamed for such views and statements , true in themselves and very well

expressed ? We pause for a reply ? Is it that this foolish " accuser " of our " brethren " is so opposed to Freemasonry that he can neither afford to be fair , nor is willing to be just ? Is it that disbelieving Freemasons , he does not shut his eyes to the fact , that such an exposition

The Cant Of Masonry.

of Masoflic principles is likely to find many admirers , and , therefore , as one sang of old : " Vixque tenet Iachrymas Quia nil lachrymabile csrnit ?" And having said this we will make a little confession . It is perfectly true that Freemasons

like other mortal beings are sometimes inconsistent . If we ail acted up to our professions here , what a very different world this would soon be , but it is " old as the hills" that profession and practice , preaching and performance , do not always go hand in hand now . While the world

lasts we shall ever have before our eyes this patent proof of the great infirmity of humanity , and as Freemasons are only human like any one else , they cannot and do not claim any exemption whatever from those many weaknesses which betray our common origin , those

many shortcomings which mark ever on earth the best and the wisest of us all . That in Freemaiovry , as in everything else of this lower world , we may find many flaws , many incongruities , many errors , we do not for a moment deny , and that we do not all act up to the

goodly precepts of Freemasonry is undoubtedly and undeniably true . But such , we may well also bear in mind , is the unchanging condition of our race . We do not deny either that Freemasons , like everybody else , do not always mean what they sai' , or say what they

mean ; as in every brotherhood of earth , there are those who bring no credit on its fair name , but we distinctly deny that there is , or need be , any " Cant in Freemasonry , " inasmuch as its professions are alsvays truthful , and its actions are ever real . That Freemasonry does

not benefit society and the age in which wo live is a perverse paradox , worthy ofthe superficial Ultramontane or the sneering Jesuit . No society can fail to have utility and blessing for man and for the world , which loudly proclaims , with no views of self-interest or egotistical self-laudation , the

ever needful truths of toleration , liberality , respect for law and order , and the fervid maintainence of the sacred rights of personal liberty , independence , and the individual conscience of the homo . Freemasonry , as a friendly brotherhood , seeks to enrol all men in its peaceful arniv , who

neither atheists nor libertines , and leaving the defence of dogmatic and doctrinal teaching , to the religious body or church , can agree in recognising the fatherhood of God , and the brotherhood of man . Surely if Freemasons can unite men of various beliefs , in deeds of charity

and sympathy , it does a good act , it represents a true thing ; and we feel persuaded that if Freemasonry is only sincere in upholding its own great principles of thought and action , it has before it both a goodly mission and a noble work .

Masonic Archæology.

MASONIC ARCH ? OLOGY .

[ In consequence of press of matter we continue these papers here , instead of in a separate column as an individual communication . The " we " has taken the place of the " I , " that is all the difference . ] There is a theory of Masonic Archaeology

which has now to be considered , namely , thai the real History of Freemasonry begins from the Revival of 1717 . There is no doubt a very great difficulty by historical or documentary evidence in linking on Freemasonry , for instance , to the Guild System , but that was to be expected from the nature of the case ! No one contends

that we are aware of , that our Masonic ritual today , by way of illustration , is " totidem verbis , the same as that of the guilds , for that would b £ an absurdity . In the history of all human asso ciations , the beginnings are simple and unornatc

it is only in their maturity and developementi that they become systematized and artificial , » we may so write . No doubt in 1717 the then existing ritual was enlarged and elabora te 11 adhering to the leading principles and landmarks * and it is just possible that in early days , the

local lodges only admitted to the degree of Fello * craft , and that the Grand Lodge or Grand asseiB ' bly as a specially convened Master ' s Lodge gaf alone the Third Degree . This would expla '" Dermott ' s evidence , which though not altogetW reliable , is not to be absolutely despised or ' '

“The Freemason: 1876-10-07, Page 6” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 11 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fvl/issues/fvl_07101876/page/6/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
CONTENTS. Article 1
REPORTS OF MASONIC MEETINGS. Article 1
Scotland. Article 2
THE CANT OF MASONRY. Article 3
PROVINCIAL GRAND LODGE OF SOMERSET. Article 4
NEW MASONIC HALL AT REDRUTH. Article 5
RE-OPENING OF THE ABERDEEN MASONIC HALL. Article 5
Masonic and General Tidings. Article 5
COSMOPOLITAN MASONIC CALENDAR. Article 6
Untitled Article 6
TO OUR READERS. Article 6
Answers to Correspondents. Article 6
REMITTANCES RECEIVED. Article 6
Births, Marriages, and Deaths. Article 6
Untitled Article 6
THE CANT OF MASONRY. Article 6
MASONIC ARCHÆOLOGY. Article 6
"WE WILL NOT GO TO CANOSSA." Article 7
NEXT BOYS' SCHOOL ELECTION. Article 7
HERMETIC MASONRY. Article 8
EMULATION LODGE OF IMPROVEMENT. Article 8
Original Correspondence. Article 8
THE SISTER SYSTEMS: MASONRY AND CHRISTIANITY. Article 9
CONSECRATION OF THE KENT DALE LODGE OF MARK MASTER MASONS, No. 195. Article 9
METROPOLITAN MASONIC MEETINGS. Article 10
MASONIC MEETINGS IN WEST LANCASHIRE AND CHESHIRE. Article 10
MASONIC MEETINGS IN GLASGOW AND WEST ST OF SCOTLAND. Article 10
MASONIC MEETINGS IN EDINBURGH AND VICINITY. Article 10
Untitled Ad 10
Untitled Ad 10
Untitled Ad 10
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5 Articles
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Page 6

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

Cosmopolitan Masonic Calendar.

COSMOPOLITAN MASONIC CALENDAR .

W . Masters and Secretaries are earnestly requested to forward to the publisher , at the Offices , 198 , Fleet-street , E . G ., particulars of the place , days , and months of meeting of their respective lodges , chapters , and other Masonic bodies , for insertion in the issue of the Calendar for 1877 .

Ar00601

IMPORTANT NOTICE .

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

It is very necessary for our readers to advise os 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 .

To Our Readers.

TO OUR READERS .

The Freemason is a sixteen-page 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 . Annual subscription in the United Kingdom , Post free , 10 / - P . O . O . ' s to be made payable at the chief office , London .

Answers To Correspondents.

Answers to Correspondents .

All Communications , Advertisements , & c , intended for insertion in the Number of the following Saturday , must reach the Office not later tnan 12 o ' clock on Wednesday morning . We do not undertake to return rejected communications ,

The following stand over : —Memorial to the late Bro . Wescoe ; Reports of Lodges , 893 , Millbrook ; 332 , Hadley ; 321 , Bonill ; Chapter 111 , Ardross in ; Mark Lodge , 14 6 , Lancaster ; Prov . G . Mark Lodge of Somerset ; Red Cross Conclave , 33 , Portsmouth .

Remittances Received.

REMITTANCES RECEIVED .

£ s- A . Adcock , Thos ., Montreal CP . O . O . ) 1 4 o Bate , O . H ., The Cape ( P . O . O . ) o 6 o Brady , H . S ., St . Helena ( P . O . O . ) o 7 o Brady , J ., Bermuda ( per Admiralty , Cash ) o 9 o Clnvtnn . Cant .. India fP . Ci . Q . \ o 11 o

Cruft , C , Indiana ( P . O . O . ) 1 1 o Cunningham , J ., Gibraltar ( P . O . O . ) 200 Dantes , S . Africa ( P . O . O . ) o 14 1 Dowling , R ., St . Helena ( P . O . O . ) o 13 9 Eichbaum , U . S . A . ( B . of E . ) 1 4 o Hayward , F . A ., Victoria ( Cash ) 1 o o Laurie . G .. Constantinople ( Cash ) o 12 o

Meyer , C . E ., U . S . A . ( Cheque ) o 12 o Peake , H . H ., Ballarat ( P . O . O . ) o 12 o Pickthrall , T . W ., S . Africa ( P . O . O . ) 1 4 o Simpson , W . H ., New Zealand ( P . O . O . ) 5 o o Stuart , D ., Peru ( Diaft ) 140 Sutton , Gen ., U . S . A ; ( B . of E . ) 3 o o Toby , C , Tasmania ( P . O . O . ) 200

Births, Marriages, And Deaths.

Births , Marriages , and Deaths .

[ The charge is 2 s . 6 d for announcements , not exceeding four lines , under this heading . ]

BIRTHS . APPLETON . —On the 29 th ult ., at Dan-y-Graig , Forest-hill , Mrs . Walter P . Appleton , 0 / a daughter . ARMSTRONG . —On the 28 th Aug ., at Meean Meer , Punjaub , the wife of the Rev . W . F . Armstrong , of a daughter . BROWN . —On the 25 th ult ., at Penn-fields , Wolverhampton , the wife of VV . A . Brown , of a son .

MARRIAGES . LANU—M'LELLAN . —On the 21 th ult ., at Blairvaddick , Row , Dumbartonshire , R . Hamilton Lang , Imperial Ottoman Bank , Bucharest , to Margaret , daughter of W . M'Lellan , Esq .

OVERTON—SANDERS . — . On the 25 th ult ., at St . Peter ' s Church , Brighton , by the Rev . R . E . H . Raines , Arthur , third son of Mr . J . T . Overton , of Sutton Lodge , Surrey , to Caroline Harriet , youngest daughter of the late Mr . W . S . Saunders , of Burstow Lodge , Surrey .

DEATHS . ALLEN . —On the 30 th ult ., at Newport , I . W ., John Allen , Esq ., aged 73 . BONCKY . —On the 24 th ult ., Bro . C . Boncey , Life Subsciiber to the Licensed Victuallers' Institution , and Steward of the " Albert Edward " Saloon Steamer , aged 56 . QIARIDGE . —On the 23 rd ult ., at 231 , Queen ' s-Road ,

Peckham , John Joseph Claridge , late of the Old Kentroad , in his 6 ist year . Durr . —On the 29 th ult ., at St . George ' s-Road , S . W ., aged 65 , Eleanor , widow of the late A . Duff , Esq . EAOIE . —On the 2 lnd ult ., Francis John Eadie , of 6 , Fleet-lane , Farringdon-street , aged 31 . EDMONDS . —On the ist inst ., at Hunter-street , Brunswick square , Harry Tarrant , son of Bro , T . W . Edmunds , aged five vears .

Ar00609

TheFreemason,SATURDAY , OCT . 7 , 1876 .

The Cant Of Masonry.

THE CANT OF MASONRY .

Such is the polite reading which the " Hampshire Post , " of September 22 nd , gives to its solitary and singular leader , which we print in another column for the information of our brethren . We shall all feel at once how polite it is and how true . It seems that the actual cause of

this intemperate and silly ebullition of a weak pen , and a weaker understanding , was the dedication of a new lodge at Havant , on the 1 st ult ., by our distinguished Bro . P . G . M . W . Beach , M . P ., and " notamment , " as the French say , a soeech delivered by Bro . Henry Ford . An account

of the proceedings and speeches appeared in our last impression , and we cannot , for the life of us , see what can possibly have aroused the indignation of our irate and unreasoning contemporary . We do not perceive that in anything which Bro . Beach , according to his wont , well said ,

or Bro . Ford addressed to his brethren , there is any ground for faultfinding , or complaint . We , of course , are never bound by the "dicta" of individual speakers , and had Bro . Ford ( he seems to be the chief offender in our contemporary ' s "jaundiced eye" ) proclaimed anything contrary

to Masonic tenets , we should not have defended his utterances , simply because he was a Freemason . But we confess that we are at a loss to understand what it is which our contemporary has really to animadvert upon . He may not like Freemasons , he may not approve of

Freemasonry . Some do not ; but at any rate he may be civil in his epithets and reasonable in his remarks . We do not quite gather , after more than one perusal , what it is even which he is p leased to term the " Cant of Masonry . " Is it Bro . Beach ' s truthful declaration that we were

once an operative body , and are now a speculative body ? Or is it Bro . Ford ' s assertion that we are loyal , peaceable , and patriotic , tolerant , truthful , and benevolent ? The writer of this childish article seems to have got into his noddle , ( not , we fancy , a very strong one , by this

specimen of his writing ) , that somehow or other Freemasonry is used by Freemasons for the purpose of private advantage , or personal advancement , and that by its secret organization Freemasons are enabled to favour one another at the expense alike of the public purse , and

individual merit . Greater nonsense never was penned , a grosser delusion per se never was fostered , or propagated by any one . After a long experience of Freemasonry we can safely assert that we have never known an instance where Freemasonry has been used for anyother purposes

than for those purely Masonic in themselves . Such a perversion of our system and teaching is forbidden by the first principles of our Order , and to state publicly that such is the " way " of the Masonic " world , " is alike contrary to truth , and a direct calumny on a very upright ,

conscientious , and patriotic body of men . Bro . Ford nowhere , that we see , claims for Freemasons any alleged superiority over other men . Neither does he , as the " Hampshire Post , " appears to fancy , assert for Freemasonry the " status" or influence of a " religion . " He

may possibly point out that Freemasonry inculcates loyalty to the sovereign and obedience to the laws of the state where Freemasons happen to be , that Freemasons are good citizens and true patriots , and that the unchanging teaching of Freemasonry is a pure morality , the morality of

the Bible , that morality without which the noisiest professions are worthless , and the most abstract speculations a snare . Why is Bro . Ford to be blamed for such views and statements , true in themselves and very well

expressed ? We pause for a reply ? Is it that this foolish " accuser " of our " brethren " is so opposed to Freemasonry that he can neither afford to be fair , nor is willing to be just ? Is it that disbelieving Freemasons , he does not shut his eyes to the fact , that such an exposition

The Cant Of Masonry.

of Masoflic principles is likely to find many admirers , and , therefore , as one sang of old : " Vixque tenet Iachrymas Quia nil lachrymabile csrnit ?" And having said this we will make a little confession . It is perfectly true that Freemasons

like other mortal beings are sometimes inconsistent . If we ail acted up to our professions here , what a very different world this would soon be , but it is " old as the hills" that profession and practice , preaching and performance , do not always go hand in hand now . While the world

lasts we shall ever have before our eyes this patent proof of the great infirmity of humanity , and as Freemasons are only human like any one else , they cannot and do not claim any exemption whatever from those many weaknesses which betray our common origin , those

many shortcomings which mark ever on earth the best and the wisest of us all . That in Freemaiovry , as in everything else of this lower world , we may find many flaws , many incongruities , many errors , we do not for a moment deny , and that we do not all act up to the

goodly precepts of Freemasonry is undoubtedly and undeniably true . But such , we may well also bear in mind , is the unchanging condition of our race . We do not deny either that Freemasons , like everybody else , do not always mean what they sai' , or say what they

mean ; as in every brotherhood of earth , there are those who bring no credit on its fair name , but we distinctly deny that there is , or need be , any " Cant in Freemasonry , " inasmuch as its professions are alsvays truthful , and its actions are ever real . That Freemasonry does

not benefit society and the age in which wo live is a perverse paradox , worthy ofthe superficial Ultramontane or the sneering Jesuit . No society can fail to have utility and blessing for man and for the world , which loudly proclaims , with no views of self-interest or egotistical self-laudation , the

ever needful truths of toleration , liberality , respect for law and order , and the fervid maintainence of the sacred rights of personal liberty , independence , and the individual conscience of the homo . Freemasonry , as a friendly brotherhood , seeks to enrol all men in its peaceful arniv , who

neither atheists nor libertines , and leaving the defence of dogmatic and doctrinal teaching , to the religious body or church , can agree in recognising the fatherhood of God , and the brotherhood of man . Surely if Freemasons can unite men of various beliefs , in deeds of charity

and sympathy , it does a good act , it represents a true thing ; and we feel persuaded that if Freemasonry is only sincere in upholding its own great principles of thought and action , it has before it both a goodly mission and a noble work .

Masonic Archæology.

MASONIC ARCH ? OLOGY .

[ In consequence of press of matter we continue these papers here , instead of in a separate column as an individual communication . The " we " has taken the place of the " I , " that is all the difference . ] There is a theory of Masonic Archaeology

which has now to be considered , namely , thai the real History of Freemasonry begins from the Revival of 1717 . There is no doubt a very great difficulty by historical or documentary evidence in linking on Freemasonry , for instance , to the Guild System , but that was to be expected from the nature of the case ! No one contends

that we are aware of , that our Masonic ritual today , by way of illustration , is " totidem verbis , the same as that of the guilds , for that would b £ an absurdity . In the history of all human asso ciations , the beginnings are simple and unornatc

it is only in their maturity and developementi that they become systematized and artificial , » we may so write . No doubt in 1717 the then existing ritual was enlarged and elabora te 11 adhering to the leading principles and landmarks * and it is just possible that in early days , the

local lodges only admitted to the degree of Fello * craft , and that the Grand Lodge or Grand asseiB ' bly as a specially convened Master ' s Lodge gaf alone the Third Degree . This would expla '" Dermott ' s evidence , which though not altogetW reliable , is not to be absolutely despised or ' '

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