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Royal Masonic Institution For Boys.

mg of the part-song of Brinley Richards ' , " The Cambrian Plume . " The Earl of Shrewsbury followed by proposing " The Health of the Right Hon . the Earl of Carnarvon , Prov . G . M ., Chairman , " and in doing so said : —Ladies and Brethren , —I hope

you will fill a bumper to drink to the health of him whom I am about to offer to your notice - and when I mention to you that I have the honour to propose to you the health of ray old schoolfellr v cf my old college companion , of my broth */ in politics , and my brother in

Masonry , our Pro-Grand Master the Earl of Carnarvon , I am glad to think that you will pardon any want of eloquence on my part in offering this toast to you . As boys , as college friends , and in the House , we have kept up that intimacy , and it has been a pleasure to me that

• we have gone out into the world together . I told him I would not praise him , I knew his bashful disposition s but , I said , you must allow friendship to speak fairly and freely on your behalf . I am glad , therefore , to offer his health to cuch a distinguished assembly as I see before

me . I know that time is valuable , and I know that ladies do not like long speeches , therefore , I shall do no more than propose to you "The Health of the Pro-Grand Master , with all his titles , the Earl of Carnarvon . " ( Applause . ) The toast was drank enthusiastically , and in

reply , The Chairman said : Ladies and Brethren , — There is an old proverb that it is extremely pleasant for any one to be praised by one who is himself praised . It is equally pleasant to have your health proposed by an old school and

college friend : and my noble friend who just now has been good enough to propose my health , has done so not only as a Mason , but in recollection of many pleasant dajs and hours which we in former times have passed together . ( Hear hear . ) I thank him most cordially for the

kindness . which has prompted every word , and I thank this great meeting , also , for the kindly , and more than that , the friendly manner in which they have been pleased to receive that health . ( Cheers . ) Brethren , I have a duty now to perforin in submitting to you another toast

which stands upon my list , and which is one well deserving of all commendation . You are well aware that Masonry has been from all time past compacted , so to speak , of different orders and of different degrees 3 above all things , it has represented these two great principles , the

principle of election and the principle of appointment . Your Masters are elected in your lodges , your Grand Master is elected by the free voice of the Craft ( Hear , hear ) , and yet both Masters and Grand Masters , each in their turn , have certain great powers of appointment vested

in them ; and the officers who more than any represent this double principle of election and appointment are your Grand Officers . They have all served their turn as Masters in their lodges 3 they have all taken their part in the administration of the Craft in the provinces 3 and

they have all been selected , in turn , by the Grand Master for the time being j and , therefore , they are above all the lights and the pillars , so to speak , of the Craft . ( Hear , hear . ) Brethren , we have some of them present here to-day , and I give you their health , and with that toast I give you the name of one who has but recently

been invested with the purple of office , but who already has made . himself a position of great popularity in his own county , " The Provincial Grand Master of West Yorkshire , Sir Henry Edwards . " ( Great cheering . ) The toast was fittingly accepted by the whole company , and immediately responded to bv

Sir HenryEdwards , who said , —My lords , ladies , and . brother Masons , it is indeed a great and unexpected pleasure , as it is a great privilege , for any Mason to be allowed to stand up in this room to respond for a toast of the importance which I consider this to be . It is quite clear that your General cannot carry on the affairs of

the Craft without his lieutenants , and it is indeed handsome on his part to acknowledge that it is so—that we are all dependent one upon the other , from the head down to the very lowest of the Craft . Friends , all I can say is this that I entirely agree with those who support this Institution , to the Masons , their wives , their daughters ,

Royal Masonic Institution For Boys.

their swters , met with tnem to do honour to our Provincial and Pro Grand Master ; and I must say this , that of all great meetings that I have attended I have never known such a success as this . ( Great applause . ) It only shows how much our Provincial and Pro Grand Master ' s abilities are

appreciated by the Craft in general 3 and it also shows that those who have come here might have come here entirel y in consequence of knowing he was to preside this evening . I will not say much more , because I know that tim « is short , and very little time is to be given to

subordinates like myself 3 but I cannot help saying one good word for the lodge to which I have the honour to ' . belong , No . 61 ofthe Province of West Yorkshire . ( Cheers . ) I congratulate them on assembling in such numbers to-night , and for the wonderful contributions they have made to the

Boys . School . I think ' that I can answer for this , that next year it will be larger still . ( Renewed cheering . ) My Lord , I am obliged to you for the honour you have done me , and I am sorry that the time is so short as it is . Miss Josephine Sherrington here sang the

Shadow song from " Dinorah , " and was enthusiastically cheered and encored . After she had complied with the call , and been again rapturously applauded ; The Chairman rose to propose the toast of the evening , "Prosperity to the Royal Masonic

Institution for Boys . " He said , —Brethren , there is an old saying somewhere that" After the nightingales come the crows , " and I feel myself very much in the position of a crow when I follow the extremely beautiful air to which we have just been listening 3 but whether I be a crow or whether I

be any other sort 01 bird—and I lay no cla 1 m to being a nightingale— it is my duty to trespass on your patience for a few minutes , and I promise that they shall be but a few minutes , whilst I endeavour to give you that which is after all , the toast of the evening , that which has

brought us together to day . ( Hear hear . ) Brethren , I "have to give you "The Prosperity of this Institution . " In this , as in every institution , we naturall y look back to the past , and if we compare the past with the present how very wide will that difference be . I must ask you to go

back with me as far as the year 1739 , and you need not be afraid that I shall give you a record of every fact that has occurred between then and now 3 but I ask you to remember what the year 1739 was in England . Politically it was very different from the present . We were on the eve

of a civil war , and of an internal disturbance . In matters of education , though there were great writers and great thinkers whom we still delight to read and to honour , there was little education in the class at least for whom this school is provided , and , Masonically , it was an important

year , because just at that time the Pope had thought it worth while in England to fulminate the bull against Freemasonry ; and English Freemasonry itself did not number , I suppose , within the four seas , one-half of those whom I see collected in this room . In that year , 1739 ,

I find that a resolution was proposed during the Grand Mastershi p of one who , strange to say , bore my own name , the Lord Carnarvon of the day , from which grew out , some years afterwards , first the Girls' Schools and secondly the Boys' School . That resolution is

now matter of Masonic history . It was subsequently acted upon as I have said , and this institution was established , In those days it was but a small affair ; there were but six scholars , and they were to be clothed , and brought up , and nurtured , and educated ; but in the inevitable

default of the necessary accommodation it was provided that they should be brought up in any neighbouring school which would offer a good education : Since then , however , great is the difference ! Buildings have been erected which we all know , and the present school , for the sake

of which we are assembled together to-day , numbers within its walls no less , I am told , than 177 boys who are brought up , clothed , and educated entirely free of expense to their friends ; they receive what may be termed a thoroughly good

commercial education , they go forth subsequently into life , and 1 believe from all that I have heard , that they do honour to themselves generally , and to the institution which has sent them forth . Year by year this school has passed

Royal Masonic Institution For Boys.

nnder examination- * -first of all under the Syndicate of Cambridge , and periodically by the University Local Examinations , and it may be a matter of satisfaction to all those who take an interest in this Institution to know that since the day when these buildings were erected , now

some 16 years since , so satisfactory has been thfe health of those boys , that I am informed that during the whole of that period there have been but three deaths . In this time the school and the Craft have gone on steadily advancing together , and this is an illustration in fact of the

way in which the Craft itself is worked in thie country . It has undertaken useful works 5 by those useful works it stands 5 and through those useful works it has spread far and wide its great reputation for usefulness and for charity . I have to say one word on the subject of that

which , after all , affects all these questions more closely than anything else , and which though it may sound dull , is yet of vital consequence—I mean the question of finance . T have not myself had the opportunity of looking into or examining closely the financial condition of this

institution . All that I can say is to be derived from those who are more conversant with it ; and whilst on the one hand there is much that is satisfactory I am bound a / so to point out to you that , like all human things , it even yet admits of amendment . You have , no doubt , done much :

large sums are subscribed on every gathering such as this . You have erected magnificent buildings ; you have even , as I am informed , paid off" the debt upon these buildings j and you give an education to these boys at what seems to me comparatively a

very low figure , viz ., £ \ $ a year , and I am . told further that even that £ 4 . 5 a year has been gradually reduced , as expenses have been brought down during the last few years . All this you ' have done , all this is matter of honest pride and satisfaction , but I have also to remind you that

this institution has no endowment , and that the money which is ^ subscribed on these occasions has hitherto , as I understand , been only just sufficient to pay the way of this great Institution . And , more than that , I may repeat what was said by one who formerly spoke in this place , and

spoke , I think , on that point with considerable truth , when he stated that the subscriptions proceed too frequently from a certain given fixed number of individuals , and are not so largely taken up and supported as they should be by the whole body of the Craft . In this , as in

other matters of charity , I desire that the pyramid should have as broad a base as possible—should rest on that base , and should not rest on a tiny bottom . Nothing but a large amount of subscriptions from a great number of individuals can make the base of

your pyramid broad , and nothing but breadth of base is a security for such an institution as this . And now I have said enough , and perhaps I should not have said so much had I not myself absolutely felt bound on such an occasion to do so . I have said quite enough for so . festive an

occasion as this . I can only commend the charity to you and to your sympathies by commending it to all those who have in former times supported it so nobly and liberally . I commend it further to those brethren who as individuals have sympathised with , but have

not yet given any visible and tangible evidence of that sympathy 5 and lastly , and certainly most potentially , 1 commend it to those who can do more for it than any brother here present , the ladies who have sat down with us to-day . Bro . George Plucknett , Treasurer , replied as

follows : —Ladies and brethren , —To the last toast I have to reply . I beg to thank you , and to express the gratitude of the Institution for the very kind manner in which the toast has been received . First , let me express on the part of the Institution our gratitude to the noble lord

who has presided here to-nig ht . While the Institution has the privilege and the advantage of being presided over by a nobleman in the exalted position which Lord Carnarvon is , we may augur well for the prosperity of the Institution . Allow

me also to express our grateful thanks to the ladies for their presence here to-night 3 and we may be assured that while they take an interest in the prosperity of the Institution there is no telling what success may attend it . I may tell

“The Freemason: 1875-07-10, Page 14” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 30 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fvl/issues/fvl_10071875/page/14/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
TABLE OF CONTENTS. Article 1
REPORTS OF MASONIC MEETINGS. Article 1
Royal Arch. Article 5
Scotland. Article 5
CONSECRATION OF THE UNITED MILITARY LODGE (No. 1537.) Article 6
CONSECRATION OF THE CHAUCER LODGE, No. 1540. Article 7
Masonic Tidings. Article 8
PROVINCIAL GRAND LODGE OF DEVON. Article 9
Untitled Article 10
TO OUR READERS. Article 10
TO ADVERTISERS. Article 10
Answers to Correspondents. Article 10
Untitled Article 10
THE CONSECRATION OF THE CHAUCER LODGE. Article 10
MASONIC SYMPATHY. Article 10
THE ANNIVERSARY OF THE BOYS' SCHOOL FOR 1875. Article 10
THE RECENT FLOODS IN FRANCE. Article 11
PROVINCIAL FUNDS.—III. Article 11
Original Correspondence. Article 11
Multum in Parbo; or Masonic Notes and Queries. Article 12
ROYAL MASONIC INSTITUTION FOR BOYS. Article 12
PROVINCIAL GRAND MARK LODGE OF SOMERSET. Article 12
ROYAL MASONIC INSTITUTION FOR BOYS. Article 13
INSTITUTION FOR BOYS. Article 13
PROVINCIAL GRAND LODGE OF LEICESTERSHIRE AND RUTLAND. Article 15
AN ORATION Article 16
LODGE "ROMAN EAGLE," EDINBURGH , No. 160. Article 16
Freemasonry in New Zealand. Article 17
METROPOLITAN MASONIC MEETINGS. Article 18
MASONIC MEETINGS IN WEST LANCASHIRE AND CHESHIRE. Article 18
MASONIC MEETINGS IN EAST LANCASHIRE. Article 18
MASONIC MEETINGS IN GLASGOW AND VICINITY. Article 18
MASONIC MEETINGS IN EDINBURGH AND VICINITY. Article 18
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Royal Masonic Institution For Boys.

mg of the part-song of Brinley Richards ' , " The Cambrian Plume . " The Earl of Shrewsbury followed by proposing " The Health of the Right Hon . the Earl of Carnarvon , Prov . G . M ., Chairman , " and in doing so said : —Ladies and Brethren , —I hope

you will fill a bumper to drink to the health of him whom I am about to offer to your notice - and when I mention to you that I have the honour to propose to you the health of ray old schoolfellr v cf my old college companion , of my broth */ in politics , and my brother in

Masonry , our Pro-Grand Master the Earl of Carnarvon , I am glad to think that you will pardon any want of eloquence on my part in offering this toast to you . As boys , as college friends , and in the House , we have kept up that intimacy , and it has been a pleasure to me that

• we have gone out into the world together . I told him I would not praise him , I knew his bashful disposition s but , I said , you must allow friendship to speak fairly and freely on your behalf . I am glad , therefore , to offer his health to cuch a distinguished assembly as I see before

me . I know that time is valuable , and I know that ladies do not like long speeches , therefore , I shall do no more than propose to you "The Health of the Pro-Grand Master , with all his titles , the Earl of Carnarvon . " ( Applause . ) The toast was drank enthusiastically , and in

reply , The Chairman said : Ladies and Brethren , — There is an old proverb that it is extremely pleasant for any one to be praised by one who is himself praised . It is equally pleasant to have your health proposed by an old school and

college friend : and my noble friend who just now has been good enough to propose my health , has done so not only as a Mason , but in recollection of many pleasant dajs and hours which we in former times have passed together . ( Hear hear . ) I thank him most cordially for the

kindness . which has prompted every word , and I thank this great meeting , also , for the kindly , and more than that , the friendly manner in which they have been pleased to receive that health . ( Cheers . ) Brethren , I have a duty now to perforin in submitting to you another toast

which stands upon my list , and which is one well deserving of all commendation . You are well aware that Masonry has been from all time past compacted , so to speak , of different orders and of different degrees 3 above all things , it has represented these two great principles , the

principle of election and the principle of appointment . Your Masters are elected in your lodges , your Grand Master is elected by the free voice of the Craft ( Hear , hear ) , and yet both Masters and Grand Masters , each in their turn , have certain great powers of appointment vested

in them ; and the officers who more than any represent this double principle of election and appointment are your Grand Officers . They have all served their turn as Masters in their lodges 3 they have all taken their part in the administration of the Craft in the provinces 3 and

they have all been selected , in turn , by the Grand Master for the time being j and , therefore , they are above all the lights and the pillars , so to speak , of the Craft . ( Hear , hear . ) Brethren , we have some of them present here to-day , and I give you their health , and with that toast I give you the name of one who has but recently

been invested with the purple of office , but who already has made . himself a position of great popularity in his own county , " The Provincial Grand Master of West Yorkshire , Sir Henry Edwards . " ( Great cheering . ) The toast was fittingly accepted by the whole company , and immediately responded to bv

Sir HenryEdwards , who said , —My lords , ladies , and . brother Masons , it is indeed a great and unexpected pleasure , as it is a great privilege , for any Mason to be allowed to stand up in this room to respond for a toast of the importance which I consider this to be . It is quite clear that your General cannot carry on the affairs of

the Craft without his lieutenants , and it is indeed handsome on his part to acknowledge that it is so—that we are all dependent one upon the other , from the head down to the very lowest of the Craft . Friends , all I can say is this that I entirely agree with those who support this Institution , to the Masons , their wives , their daughters ,

Royal Masonic Institution For Boys.

their swters , met with tnem to do honour to our Provincial and Pro Grand Master ; and I must say this , that of all great meetings that I have attended I have never known such a success as this . ( Great applause . ) It only shows how much our Provincial and Pro Grand Master ' s abilities are

appreciated by the Craft in general 3 and it also shows that those who have come here might have come here entirel y in consequence of knowing he was to preside this evening . I will not say much more , because I know that tim « is short , and very little time is to be given to

subordinates like myself 3 but I cannot help saying one good word for the lodge to which I have the honour to ' . belong , No . 61 ofthe Province of West Yorkshire . ( Cheers . ) I congratulate them on assembling in such numbers to-night , and for the wonderful contributions they have made to the

Boys . School . I think ' that I can answer for this , that next year it will be larger still . ( Renewed cheering . ) My Lord , I am obliged to you for the honour you have done me , and I am sorry that the time is so short as it is . Miss Josephine Sherrington here sang the

Shadow song from " Dinorah , " and was enthusiastically cheered and encored . After she had complied with the call , and been again rapturously applauded ; The Chairman rose to propose the toast of the evening , "Prosperity to the Royal Masonic

Institution for Boys . " He said , —Brethren , there is an old saying somewhere that" After the nightingales come the crows , " and I feel myself very much in the position of a crow when I follow the extremely beautiful air to which we have just been listening 3 but whether I be a crow or whether I

be any other sort 01 bird—and I lay no cla 1 m to being a nightingale— it is my duty to trespass on your patience for a few minutes , and I promise that they shall be but a few minutes , whilst I endeavour to give you that which is after all , the toast of the evening , that which has

brought us together to day . ( Hear hear . ) Brethren , I "have to give you "The Prosperity of this Institution . " In this , as in every institution , we naturall y look back to the past , and if we compare the past with the present how very wide will that difference be . I must ask you to go

back with me as far as the year 1739 , and you need not be afraid that I shall give you a record of every fact that has occurred between then and now 3 but I ask you to remember what the year 1739 was in England . Politically it was very different from the present . We were on the eve

of a civil war , and of an internal disturbance . In matters of education , though there were great writers and great thinkers whom we still delight to read and to honour , there was little education in the class at least for whom this school is provided , and , Masonically , it was an important

year , because just at that time the Pope had thought it worth while in England to fulminate the bull against Freemasonry ; and English Freemasonry itself did not number , I suppose , within the four seas , one-half of those whom I see collected in this room . In that year , 1739 ,

I find that a resolution was proposed during the Grand Mastershi p of one who , strange to say , bore my own name , the Lord Carnarvon of the day , from which grew out , some years afterwards , first the Girls' Schools and secondly the Boys' School . That resolution is

now matter of Masonic history . It was subsequently acted upon as I have said , and this institution was established , In those days it was but a small affair ; there were but six scholars , and they were to be clothed , and brought up , and nurtured , and educated ; but in the inevitable

default of the necessary accommodation it was provided that they should be brought up in any neighbouring school which would offer a good education : Since then , however , great is the difference ! Buildings have been erected which we all know , and the present school , for the sake

of which we are assembled together to-day , numbers within its walls no less , I am told , than 177 boys who are brought up , clothed , and educated entirely free of expense to their friends ; they receive what may be termed a thoroughly good

commercial education , they go forth subsequently into life , and 1 believe from all that I have heard , that they do honour to themselves generally , and to the institution which has sent them forth . Year by year this school has passed

Royal Masonic Institution For Boys.

nnder examination- * -first of all under the Syndicate of Cambridge , and periodically by the University Local Examinations , and it may be a matter of satisfaction to all those who take an interest in this Institution to know that since the day when these buildings were erected , now

some 16 years since , so satisfactory has been thfe health of those boys , that I am informed that during the whole of that period there have been but three deaths . In this time the school and the Craft have gone on steadily advancing together , and this is an illustration in fact of the

way in which the Craft itself is worked in thie country . It has undertaken useful works 5 by those useful works it stands 5 and through those useful works it has spread far and wide its great reputation for usefulness and for charity . I have to say one word on the subject of that

which , after all , affects all these questions more closely than anything else , and which though it may sound dull , is yet of vital consequence—I mean the question of finance . T have not myself had the opportunity of looking into or examining closely the financial condition of this

institution . All that I can say is to be derived from those who are more conversant with it ; and whilst on the one hand there is much that is satisfactory I am bound a / so to point out to you that , like all human things , it even yet admits of amendment . You have , no doubt , done much :

large sums are subscribed on every gathering such as this . You have erected magnificent buildings ; you have even , as I am informed , paid off" the debt upon these buildings j and you give an education to these boys at what seems to me comparatively a

very low figure , viz ., £ \ $ a year , and I am . told further that even that £ 4 . 5 a year has been gradually reduced , as expenses have been brought down during the last few years . All this you ' have done , all this is matter of honest pride and satisfaction , but I have also to remind you that

this institution has no endowment , and that the money which is ^ subscribed on these occasions has hitherto , as I understand , been only just sufficient to pay the way of this great Institution . And , more than that , I may repeat what was said by one who formerly spoke in this place , and

spoke , I think , on that point with considerable truth , when he stated that the subscriptions proceed too frequently from a certain given fixed number of individuals , and are not so largely taken up and supported as they should be by the whole body of the Craft . In this , as in

other matters of charity , I desire that the pyramid should have as broad a base as possible—should rest on that base , and should not rest on a tiny bottom . Nothing but a large amount of subscriptions from a great number of individuals can make the base of

your pyramid broad , and nothing but breadth of base is a security for such an institution as this . And now I have said enough , and perhaps I should not have said so much had I not myself absolutely felt bound on such an occasion to do so . I have said quite enough for so . festive an

occasion as this . I can only commend the charity to you and to your sympathies by commending it to all those who have in former times supported it so nobly and liberally . I commend it further to those brethren who as individuals have sympathised with , but have

not yet given any visible and tangible evidence of that sympathy 5 and lastly , and certainly most potentially , 1 commend it to those who can do more for it than any brother here present , the ladies who have sat down with us to-day . Bro . George Plucknett , Treasurer , replied as

follows : —Ladies and brethren , —To the last toast I have to reply . I beg to thank you , and to express the gratitude of the Institution for the very kind manner in which the toast has been received . First , let me express on the part of the Institution our gratitude to the noble lord

who has presided here to-nig ht . While the Institution has the privilege and the advantage of being presided over by a nobleman in the exalted position which Lord Carnarvon is , we may augur well for the prosperity of the Institution . Allow

me also to express our grateful thanks to the ladies for their presence here to-night 3 and we may be assured that while they take an interest in the prosperity of the Institution there is no telling what success may attend it . I may tell

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