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  • Dec. 7, 1895
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  • CRAFT MASONRY.
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Craft Masonry.

Archipelago in 2 dace of Bro . Sir Charles Warren , whose term of office as Governor has ceased , and to which we have drawn attention elsewhere . It is , however , in South Africa that the progress made is the most conspicuous . Here the Transvaal lodges have been organised iuto a District G . Lodge , while in Natal there is at the helm a new Dist . G . Master , in the person of Bro . Wesley

Francis , who for some years previousl y had acted as deputy to the distinguished Bro . Finnemore to whose office he has succeeded . In the Eastern Division of S . Africa great activity is constantly beingexhibited , and on the 12 th September the day following the annual meeting at Port Elizabeth of the District G . Lodge , the Dist . G . M . Bro . Dr . 0 . J . Egan , laid the memorial stone of St . Mary ' s Collegiate

Church , which had been destroyed by lire some months previously . In the West Indies there have been sundry events out of the ordinary course , such as the reception on the 20 th March , by the lodges in the island of Trinidad , of Bro . the Karl of Lathom , Pro G . Master , who at the time was visiting the West Indies for the benefit of his health . Two months later—on the 16 th May—an

address and testimonial were presented to Bro . Col . John Elliott , C . B ., C . M . G ., on vacating the office of Dist . G . Master , which he had held since 1890 . These of course , are but a few of the events we should like to mention but they will serve to convince onr readers that to whatever part of the British Empire we direct our attention , Freemasonry

has been in a flourishing condition throughout the period we have traversed in the course of this review . May it always be in the power of this journal to publish equall y satisfactory accounts of the proceedings of Masonry in those parts of the world which owe allegiance to our gracious Sovereign Lady , the Queen !

The Cross Of Honour,

The Cross Of honour ,

J . MONK FOSTER , A uthor of " A Pit Brow Lame , " " Stares of Fate , " " A Miner ' s Million , " "Queen of the Factory , " " Children of Darkness " " Passions Aftermath , " " The Lass that Lored a Miner , " " The White Gipsy , " " Judith Saxon" § 'c , $ -c . [ ALL RIGHTS RESEUVKP . ]

'fSw ^ lfT was New Year ' s Eve , and the little borough of Cole-[ ffi § f jlsaj towne was rapidly being enveloped in a thick , soft , J £ j j » l . j nn ( l seasonable looking overcoat of white snow . The -fM asS-l dock of the old parish church in the Market Place had ' | . Gjj | = j ^ g 8 ) y . just chimed the half hour between eight and nine ; and although the big feathery flakes were falling thickly ,

the thoroughfare was crowded with people intent upon making purchases necessary for a due welcoming of the New Year ; whilst ( lie brightly lighted and gaily tlightcd shop windows were thronged by eager sightseers of widely varying years .

The Roj-al Hotel was one of the oldest and best known hostelrics in the town ; and inside its ample portico , or rather beyond it , all seemed most attractive , cosy , and bustling . Behind the great bar , about which half a dozen young fellows were lounging , while they

crossed wits with the yellow-haired barmaid , lay the "Royal Snug , " mid herein , scattered about the room within comfortable distance of •lie lire ' s red mass , were a dozen or so of old cronies , whose wont it was to meet there almost nightly , and over pipe and glass discuss every topic under the sun .

That grey-bearded man seated nearest the fire was an old Black Watch man , who had seen service in the Crimea , and during the Indian Mutiny : the big lumbering giant of a chap with a brownish heard , who sat opposite , hailed from " Auld Reekie , " like the c . v-• "" Idier , and he plied the vocation of travelling draper , or " Scotchman' ' «> lie and his kind are termed in . Lancashire .

Those about them were all well known tradesmen in the town . 'I'he druggist had a shop on the farther side of the Market Place , die surveyor was employed by the Corporation , the reporter did the .

iicws-getf ing for the local sheet , the mine manager managed a local •nine , said to be the deepest in J'higland , and the others were all s "inebodies , or they would not have been in the snug at the Royal Hotel .

The conversation had taken many turns in the course of the ' ¦ veiling , and at length had run itself fairly out ; but the Old Soldier S | 0 ing in the corner mig ht have been deaf and dumb , so utterl y unloved did he appear to be by the various little speeches , and their intervening silences .

'I'he momentary lull , although everyone felt it , was not so awkward ; is it mi ght have ' been had the various glasses been empty ; audit W | is brought to an end by the Travelling Draper remarking in his ( ' * 't' ]» bass voice , as he laid down the remnant of his " small special Scotch "—

" 1 suppose , Mae ., that you ' ve seen this month ' s ' Fortni ghtl y' r " 'I'he , old soldier nodded in reply . " Well , I see onr only general has a paper in it in which he , lliikes a rather remarkable suggestion about applications for the N ir 'toria Cross . "

The Cross Of Honour,

•' lies always making remarkable suggestions , isn ' t he ? " broke in the soldier , suddenly flashing into scorn to the delight of the company . "I never , " he added , " " heard of him making any suggestions that weren ' t remarkable , and he ' s always frying to wrigg | ' e " mil of them afterwards when somebod y wants found out whafihov ' ro good for . If our ' only General' as yon and ofhei—well , bullish

people , call him . had had old Nosey "Wellington to ileal with his lir . st suggestion would have been his last—as Adjutant-General ' . " " Now , look here , Mae , " retorted the Drapoi . who knew the old member of the Black Watch well , and meant to draw him out , " no one pretends to mistake the present Commander-in-Chief for either a Wellington or a Napoleon , but what particular fault have yon lo find with him ?"

"Ob ! he ' s good enough—for Adjutant-General ! " the Old Soldiei replied , with great deliberation . "Its a case of 'like master , like man . ' Nature evidently intended one for a coal heaver and the other for a curate ; but circumstances were against her and they drifted into the army . It ' s not a great thing for ( he Army when a colourless creature like the ' only General ' has anything to say about the Victoria Cross , elsewhere than in the pages of a monthly

magazine . "But , look here , Mae , " persisted the Draper , stoutly , ' •yon ought to ho fair even to the General . His suggestion strikes m ' e as bemg a good one . He says that the Victoria Cross should be granted to no man on his own application . "

^ "And when or where was any man ever decorated with the Victoria Cross on his own application y" the ex-soldier cried , with some heat . "Not in my time , and certainly not in my regiment , as I could show you if I "

" Ah ! by-the-bye , " interrupted the other to the annoyance of the company , who full y expected a story , "I thought the order , ' For Valour' was not established nntil you had left the service . How did it come about , old man , that you missed securing the very desirable decoration for yourself Y "

" Well you see , " replied the veteran as he seemed to fall info unutterable depths of gloom and retrospection , " I was never much of a hero myself , and I had always sense enough to prevent me from pretending to be one . We are all cowards more or less ; and the bravest man is he who has succeeded , not in eliminating the coward in his nature , but in subduing it . Honestl y I am bound to admit

that there was enough of the coward in my nature to keep my hands full for a very long time ; and in war times I was always satisfied if I . could pull through without exposing myself—or , rather , the baser part of myself to my comrades . If I didn ' t succeed in winning the Cross of Honour I . succeeded in doing something which required a thousand times more fact , perseverance and patience—I served my

full time in peace and in war . and no man in the regiment ever suspected when I left that I was a whit less brave than tie was himself . But Victoria Crosses are not given for that kind of bravery , and , in tho nature of things , cannot he given ; still there is a kind of heroism in that too , " concluded the ex-soldier with a sigh , " which is not the less heroic because it is unrecognised anil unrecognisable . "

As be finished speaking , he bent his gaze upon the table , his eyes caught his glass , and he emptied it . He ordered another supply , most of the company did likewise , and when the soff-f ' ooted maiden bad disappeared , the Reporter said , quietly . " ' A fellow feeling , ' says fhepoot , ' makes- us wondrous kind . ' and I confess that I sympathise keenly with the man who is brave eiioim-li to

confess he is a coward . Perhaps in . similar circumstances I should hick the courage to make such an avowal . To my mind , moral courage is quite as desirable and commendable as physical bravery . Now , 1 dare say , sir , " lifting bis gaze to the Old ' Soldier , "as one of the Black Watch , you have seen the "Victoria Cross won b y other soldiers . As this is New Year ' s Eve , couldn ' t you tell us something—anyfhiii " — about some of the men who have , won the Cross and wear it ' ' '

There was a chorus of assenting cries from the others , and after a quick survey of the ring of expectant faces , the grey-bearded warrior murmured . " Well , I don ' t mind if I do , but I warn you that my tale will hardly be what some of you chaps expect . It ' s a kind of delusion among civilians that every man who wears the Victoria Cross must of necessity be an exceptionall y hr . ive man . Tln . t this delusion

is a pardonable one I am prepare : ! to admit , but I insist that , it is a delusion all the same . Some of the men I have known who hive received the decoration were—well , not men of exceptional count cc . One was a chum of my own , and a man with whom 1 was thoroughly intimate . If he is alive I shall be doing no injustice to him - if he is

dead I shall not be wronging his memory , if I say that he was ( he least heroic , least brave , and the least manl y of all the many soldiers I ever met , I will tell you all about his case shortly ; but first let me tell yon what was thought in the Black Watch , my old regiment , gentlemen , about General Lord VVolseley ' s special aversion—personal application for the distinction .

' ¦ The Order of the Victoria Cross for Valour , " the Old Soldier went on , after moistening his lips with his whisky , " was institute I in 1856 , soon after the return of the troops from the Crimea , and in the regiment to which I had the honour to belong the new Order was looked upon with no especial favour . Printed forms wore sent to ours

and to all other regiments which had been engaged in the operations in the Crimea , to be tilled up by the ollicer in command with the names of such men , officers included , as might on account of acts of conspicuous gallantry performed by them be deemed eli gible for admission iuto the Order , and for decoration with it > bronze Cross . " Well , what do you think happened in ours f Why , this . After

“The Freemason: 1895-12-07, Page 9” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 5 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fvl/issues/fvl_07121895/page/9/.
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Title Category Page
CONTENTS. Article 1
Freemasonry in 1895. Article 1
CRAFT MASONRY. Article 1
The Cross Of honour, Article 9
The "Langdale " Masonic MS. Article 13
The Distinguishing Characteristic of a freemason's beart. Article 17
The Permit of Dunstanborough. A Legend of Nortbumbria. Article 17
SIGNS OF THE TIMES. Article 21
RIDING THE GOAT. Article 21
THE FIFTH CITY MASONIC BENEVOLENT ASSOCIATION. Article 21
TWO CURIOUS CERTIFICATES. Article 22
Untitled Article 23
OCCURRENCES OF THE YEAR. Article 24
Untitled Ad 26
Untitled Ad 26
Untitled Ad 26
Untitled Ad 26
Untitled Ad 26
Untitled Ad 26
Untitled Ad 26
Untitled Ad 26
Untitled Ad 26
Untitled Ad 26
Untitled Ad 26
Untitled Ad 26
Untitled Ad 26
Untitled Ad 26
Untitled Ad 26
Untitled Ad 26
Untitled Ad 26
Untitled Ad 26
Untitled Ad 26
Untitled Ad 26
Untitled Ad 26
Untitled Ad 26
Untitled Ad 26
Untitled Ad 26
Untitled Ad 27
Untitled Ad 27
Untitled Ad 27
Untitled Ad 27
Untitled Ad 27
Untitled Ad 27
Untitled Ad 27
Untitled Ad 27
Untitled Ad 27
To Correspondents . Article 27
Untitled Article 27
Masonic Notes. Article 27
Correspondence. Article 28
Masonic Notes and Queries. Article 28
BRO. ALDERMAN V. MORGAN AND THE GRAND TREASURERSHIP. Article 28
UNITED GRAND LODGE OF ENGLAND. Article 28
Untitled Ad 28
GRAND LODGE OF MARK MASTER MASONS. Article 30
Untitled Ad 31
Untitled Ad 32
PROVINCIAL GRAND LODGE OF DERBYSHIRE. Article 33
PROVINCIAL GRAND LODGE OF HERTFORDSHIRE. Article 33
Untitled Ad 33
ROYAL MASONIC INSTITUTION FOR BOYS. Article 34
PROVINCIAL GRAND LODGE OF JERSEY. Article 34
Untitled Ad 34
PROVINCIAL GRAND CHAPTER OF BERKSHIRE. Article 35
FREEMASONRY IN SOUTH AFRICA. Article 35
Untitled Ad 35
AMUSING EPISODES IN "ANCIENT" HISTORY. Article 36
Untitled Ad 36
Untitled Ad 37
The Craft Abroad. Article 38
Untitled Ad 38
CHRISTMAS AND THE KNIGHT TEMPLARS. Article 39
Craft Masonry. Article 39
Untitled Ad 39
Untitled Ad 39
Untitled Ad 40
FREEMASONRY BY LIMELIGHT. Article 40
Mark Masonry. Article 40
Untitled Ad 41
Masonic and General Tidings. Article 42
Untitled Ad 42
Untitled Ad 42
Untitled Ad 43
Untitled Ad 43
Untitled Ad 43
Untitled Ad 43
Untitled Ad 43
Untitled Ad 43
Untitled Ad 43
Ballad. Article 44
Untitled Ad 44
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Craft Masonry.

Archipelago in 2 dace of Bro . Sir Charles Warren , whose term of office as Governor has ceased , and to which we have drawn attention elsewhere . It is , however , in South Africa that the progress made is the most conspicuous . Here the Transvaal lodges have been organised iuto a District G . Lodge , while in Natal there is at the helm a new Dist . G . Master , in the person of Bro . Wesley

Francis , who for some years previousl y had acted as deputy to the distinguished Bro . Finnemore to whose office he has succeeded . In the Eastern Division of S . Africa great activity is constantly beingexhibited , and on the 12 th September the day following the annual meeting at Port Elizabeth of the District G . Lodge , the Dist . G . M . Bro . Dr . 0 . J . Egan , laid the memorial stone of St . Mary ' s Collegiate

Church , which had been destroyed by lire some months previously . In the West Indies there have been sundry events out of the ordinary course , such as the reception on the 20 th March , by the lodges in the island of Trinidad , of Bro . the Karl of Lathom , Pro G . Master , who at the time was visiting the West Indies for the benefit of his health . Two months later—on the 16 th May—an

address and testimonial were presented to Bro . Col . John Elliott , C . B ., C . M . G ., on vacating the office of Dist . G . Master , which he had held since 1890 . These of course , are but a few of the events we should like to mention but they will serve to convince onr readers that to whatever part of the British Empire we direct our attention , Freemasonry

has been in a flourishing condition throughout the period we have traversed in the course of this review . May it always be in the power of this journal to publish equall y satisfactory accounts of the proceedings of Masonry in those parts of the world which owe allegiance to our gracious Sovereign Lady , the Queen !

The Cross Of Honour,

The Cross Of honour ,

J . MONK FOSTER , A uthor of " A Pit Brow Lame , " " Stares of Fate , " " A Miner ' s Million , " "Queen of the Factory , " " Children of Darkness " " Passions Aftermath , " " The Lass that Lored a Miner , " " The White Gipsy , " " Judith Saxon" § 'c , $ -c . [ ALL RIGHTS RESEUVKP . ]

'fSw ^ lfT was New Year ' s Eve , and the little borough of Cole-[ ffi § f jlsaj towne was rapidly being enveloped in a thick , soft , J £ j j » l . j nn ( l seasonable looking overcoat of white snow . The -fM asS-l dock of the old parish church in the Market Place had ' | . Gjj | = j ^ g 8 ) y . just chimed the half hour between eight and nine ; and although the big feathery flakes were falling thickly ,

the thoroughfare was crowded with people intent upon making purchases necessary for a due welcoming of the New Year ; whilst ( lie brightly lighted and gaily tlightcd shop windows were thronged by eager sightseers of widely varying years .

The Roj-al Hotel was one of the oldest and best known hostelrics in the town ; and inside its ample portico , or rather beyond it , all seemed most attractive , cosy , and bustling . Behind the great bar , about which half a dozen young fellows were lounging , while they

crossed wits with the yellow-haired barmaid , lay the "Royal Snug , " mid herein , scattered about the room within comfortable distance of •lie lire ' s red mass , were a dozen or so of old cronies , whose wont it was to meet there almost nightly , and over pipe and glass discuss every topic under the sun .

That grey-bearded man seated nearest the fire was an old Black Watch man , who had seen service in the Crimea , and during the Indian Mutiny : the big lumbering giant of a chap with a brownish heard , who sat opposite , hailed from " Auld Reekie , " like the c . v-• "" Idier , and he plied the vocation of travelling draper , or " Scotchman' ' «> lie and his kind are termed in . Lancashire .

Those about them were all well known tradesmen in the town . 'I'he druggist had a shop on the farther side of the Market Place , die surveyor was employed by the Corporation , the reporter did the .

iicws-getf ing for the local sheet , the mine manager managed a local •nine , said to be the deepest in J'higland , and the others were all s "inebodies , or they would not have been in the snug at the Royal Hotel .

The conversation had taken many turns in the course of the ' ¦ veiling , and at length had run itself fairly out ; but the Old Soldier S | 0 ing in the corner mig ht have been deaf and dumb , so utterl y unloved did he appear to be by the various little speeches , and their intervening silences .

'I'he momentary lull , although everyone felt it , was not so awkward ; is it mi ght have ' been had the various glasses been empty ; audit W | is brought to an end by the Travelling Draper remarking in his ( ' * 't' ]» bass voice , as he laid down the remnant of his " small special Scotch "—

" 1 suppose , Mae ., that you ' ve seen this month ' s ' Fortni ghtl y' r " 'I'he , old soldier nodded in reply . " Well , I see onr only general has a paper in it in which he , lliikes a rather remarkable suggestion about applications for the N ir 'toria Cross . "

The Cross Of Honour,

•' lies always making remarkable suggestions , isn ' t he ? " broke in the soldier , suddenly flashing into scorn to the delight of the company . "I never , " he added , " " heard of him making any suggestions that weren ' t remarkable , and he ' s always frying to wrigg | ' e " mil of them afterwards when somebod y wants found out whafihov ' ro good for . If our ' only General' as yon and ofhei—well , bullish

people , call him . had had old Nosey "Wellington to ileal with his lir . st suggestion would have been his last—as Adjutant-General ' . " " Now , look here , Mae , " retorted the Drapoi . who knew the old member of the Black Watch well , and meant to draw him out , " no one pretends to mistake the present Commander-in-Chief for either a Wellington or a Napoleon , but what particular fault have yon lo find with him ?"

"Ob ! he ' s good enough—for Adjutant-General ! " the Old Soldiei replied , with great deliberation . "Its a case of 'like master , like man . ' Nature evidently intended one for a coal heaver and the other for a curate ; but circumstances were against her and they drifted into the army . It ' s not a great thing for ( he Army when a colourless creature like the ' only General ' has anything to say about the Victoria Cross , elsewhere than in the pages of a monthly

magazine . "But , look here , Mae , " persisted the Draper , stoutly , ' •yon ought to ho fair even to the General . His suggestion strikes m ' e as bemg a good one . He says that the Victoria Cross should be granted to no man on his own application . "

^ "And when or where was any man ever decorated with the Victoria Cross on his own application y" the ex-soldier cried , with some heat . "Not in my time , and certainly not in my regiment , as I could show you if I "

" Ah ! by-the-bye , " interrupted the other to the annoyance of the company , who full y expected a story , "I thought the order , ' For Valour' was not established nntil you had left the service . How did it come about , old man , that you missed securing the very desirable decoration for yourself Y "

" Well you see , " replied the veteran as he seemed to fall info unutterable depths of gloom and retrospection , " I was never much of a hero myself , and I had always sense enough to prevent me from pretending to be one . We are all cowards more or less ; and the bravest man is he who has succeeded , not in eliminating the coward in his nature , but in subduing it . Honestl y I am bound to admit

that there was enough of the coward in my nature to keep my hands full for a very long time ; and in war times I was always satisfied if I . could pull through without exposing myself—or , rather , the baser part of myself to my comrades . If I didn ' t succeed in winning the Cross of Honour I . succeeded in doing something which required a thousand times more fact , perseverance and patience—I served my

full time in peace and in war . and no man in the regiment ever suspected when I left that I was a whit less brave than tie was himself . But Victoria Crosses are not given for that kind of bravery , and , in tho nature of things , cannot he given ; still there is a kind of heroism in that too , " concluded the ex-soldier with a sigh , " which is not the less heroic because it is unrecognised anil unrecognisable . "

As be finished speaking , he bent his gaze upon the table , his eyes caught his glass , and he emptied it . He ordered another supply , most of the company did likewise , and when the soff-f ' ooted maiden bad disappeared , the Reporter said , quietly . " ' A fellow feeling , ' says fhepoot , ' makes- us wondrous kind . ' and I confess that I sympathise keenly with the man who is brave eiioim-li to

confess he is a coward . Perhaps in . similar circumstances I should hick the courage to make such an avowal . To my mind , moral courage is quite as desirable and commendable as physical bravery . Now , 1 dare say , sir , " lifting bis gaze to the Old ' Soldier , "as one of the Black Watch , you have seen the "Victoria Cross won b y other soldiers . As this is New Year ' s Eve , couldn ' t you tell us something—anyfhiii " — about some of the men who have , won the Cross and wear it ' ' '

There was a chorus of assenting cries from the others , and after a quick survey of the ring of expectant faces , the grey-bearded warrior murmured . " Well , I don ' t mind if I do , but I warn you that my tale will hardly be what some of you chaps expect . It ' s a kind of delusion among civilians that every man who wears the Victoria Cross must of necessity be an exceptionall y hr . ive man . Tln . t this delusion

is a pardonable one I am prepare : ! to admit , but I insist that , it is a delusion all the same . Some of the men I have known who hive received the decoration were—well , not men of exceptional count cc . One was a chum of my own , and a man with whom 1 was thoroughly intimate . If he is alive I shall be doing no injustice to him - if he is

dead I shall not be wronging his memory , if I say that he was ( he least heroic , least brave , and the least manl y of all the many soldiers I ever met , I will tell you all about his case shortly ; but first let me tell yon what was thought in the Black Watch , my old regiment , gentlemen , about General Lord VVolseley ' s special aversion—personal application for the distinction .

' ¦ The Order of the Victoria Cross for Valour , " the Old Soldier went on , after moistening his lips with his whisky , " was institute I in 1856 , soon after the return of the troops from the Crimea , and in the regiment to which I had the honour to belong the new Order was looked upon with no especial favour . Printed forms wore sent to ours

and to all other regiments which had been engaged in the operations in the Crimea , to be tilled up by the ollicer in command with the names of such men , officers included , as might on account of acts of conspicuous gallantry performed by them be deemed eli gible for admission iuto the Order , and for decoration with it > bronze Cross . " Well , what do you think happened in ours f Why , this . After

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