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  • The Freemason
  • Jan. 12, 1889
  • Page 12
  • ROYAL MASONIC BENEVOLENT INSTITUTION.
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The Freemason, Jan. 12, 1889: Page 12

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Page 12

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The Poet Burns.

portraits are portrayed in the picture , and beneath the photograph the following words are printed : "Inauguration of Robert Burns as Poet Laureate of Canongate Kilwinning Lodge , No . 2 . " I presume that Bro . Mackenzie desired his readers to understand that it was a " faithful representation" of the event ? If not , why publish it as such ?

As regards the minute of the ist March , 17 S 7 , Bro . Mackenzie states that , among other business , the lodge met that evening for the purpose " of conferring a tribute of respect on Burns . In the course of the evening , the R . W . Master conferred upon him the title of Poet Laureate of the Lodge , and the minute is signed by the Master , " & c I submit that anyone reading these words

would infer that the minute of that meeting instructed the author ' s statement . But there is no such statement in the minute ! The Secretary of the lodge , in his letter to Bro . Murray Lyon , places the matter in another light . He says , writing by authority , that at the meeting of ist March , 1787 , "it is understood the inauguration took place ; " and in a foot-note there is added , " The reference

to ist March , 17 S 7 , is not embraced in Lyon ' s History . " There was no occasion for embracing such a reference . Bro . Mackenzie says there was , because a Bro . More signed the minutes both of ist March , 17 S 7 , and 9 th June , 1815 . But what of that ? Nothing was said in the March minute of Burns , and there is thus no connection between the two . It is worthy of observation that the

Secretary of the lodge , writing on behalf of "the R . W . M . and office-bearers of the Lodge Canongate Kilwinning , " does not positively say that the "Inauguration" took place , but simply that it rested on an understanding ! . We are told that Bro . William Campbell , at a meeting of the lodge on the 12 th November , 1845 , stated that he had " had many opportunities of giving testimony in favour

of the particulars referred to , that he had travelled in company with Burns , and spent two of the most happy days with him at Auchtertyre Castle . " Whether Brother Campbell met Burns , as here stated , I have no means of knowing . Certainly he did not travel with Burns to Auchtertyre , and Burns , in his letters written from that place and elsewhere , makes no mention of this

brother . As regards the " particulars of which it is said that he had " many opportunities of giving testimony in favour of , " we are not told what these were , nor when , nor where Brother Campbell gave the " testimony " he refers to . But the minute of the lodge of 12 th November , 1845 , quoted in the History , is given at length in "A Winter with Burns , " and the words of the minute as there

quoted differ from the above quotation . As given by Brother Marshall , the minute of the 12 th November , 1 S 45 , reads as follows : " Brother W . C . stated that he was initiated a year or two after the Poet had left Edinburgh , yet he could vouch for the truth of what had been advanced in relation to the tradition of members a few years his seniors . He had himself spent three of the happiest days

of his life in the company of Burns at Auchtertyre House during the Autumn of 17 S 7 . " Tradition , as regards this matter , was thus appealed to before it could have arisen , for statements made so recently as a " year or two , " do not form tradition . Brother Campbell , according to the Grand Lodge Register , joined the Craft some time between February , 1 S 01 , and April , 1802 . If he travelled , as is

said , with Burns in his summer tour of 17 S 7 , he must have been on terms of close personal intimacy with the Poet j and , if the honour in question had been conferred , and so recently , on the Poet , it would , I think , have been spoken of in the course of their intercourse j but this is not said . The letter of Bro . George Simson , P . M . of the lodge , does not aid the lodge ' s contention . All that he says is

embodied in the lodge ' s minute ot 1 S 15 , and I admit the terms of that minute , and that , at that date , for the first time , the lodge claimed Burns as having held the office of its Poet Laureate . The question remains , was that claimfounded on fact ? The registration of the members of the lodge in the Register of Grand Lodge in the beginning of the present century was irregular , but I find from it that Bro .

Simson joined the lodge some time between 180 S and 1815 . He could not , therefore , have been present at the meeting of March , 17 S 7 , and he does not make any statement which he personally could have known . At the time Bro . Simson wrote Burns had been dead 19 years , and his name and genius had become famous throughout the world . Had the lodge on the Poet ' s death claimed him as

its Laureate , referred to the vacancy created by that event or have otherwise noticed it , the claim that the lodge has since put forward would have been rendered probable . But on the Poet ' s death it took no notice of the event in any way , and it passed no expression of commiseration with his afflicted widow and young children . Nor did it take any steps towards the appointment of a successor in its

Laureateship until after the lapse of 39 years ! But in 1815 the Poet ' s name had become renowned , and then those at the head of the lodge ' s affairs stepped forward , and subscribed with a flourish of trumpets 20 guineas towards the erection of a Mausoleum to his memory , and claimed him as its Poet Laureate ! It would have been much more to the lodge's credit had it sent on his death the 20 guineas

to his starving family . Bro . Mackenzie attempts to explain away the omission in his lodge ' s minutes of Burns' election to an office which , according to the minutes , had no existence , by asserting that " the minor office bearers receive but scant notice in the minutes of Scotch lodges , unless indeed as in the case under review , where the brother attained a high standard

of fame after the event ; or the reverse , as in the case of James Hogg , the Ettrick Shepherd . " This is a queer apology ! How could the framers of a lodge's minutes know whether a man was to become famous or otherwise ? The minutes of the Canongate Lodge at the period in question were kept by a practising solicitor . They appear to have been kept with care and ample fulness of detail .

The very minute assuming Burns a member of the lodge , illustrates this fact , for it bears evidence of careful revision , being partially erased in at least two places . The minutes show that the lodge created and elected Hogg to the office of Poet Laureate , but there is no similar entry as regards Burns ; and they further show that since Hogg ' s election the office has been regularly filled . Burn's

fame was in 17 S 7 much greater than that of Hogg in 1835 . Burns only on two occasions resided in Edinburgh continuously , and the dates I gave had reference to those occasions , and not to the short special visits he paid to it subsequently . Brother Marshall evidently considered Burns' residence in Edinburgh , subsequent to March , 1787 , so unconnected with his Masonic life , that he does

The Poet Burns.

not refer to it in his book ; and limits Burns' Masonic career in Edinburgh to the winter of 17 S 6-S 7 . Brother Mackenzie , however , thinks it probable that Burns' visited the Lodge Canongate Kilwinning during the flying visits he refers to . I think that it is much more probable that he spent his time among his numerous friends . But the monthly meetings of the lodge were then

held on the first of every month . Burns , in March , 177 S , came to the city on the ioth and left it on the 15 th of that month . Some time after the 9 th February , 17 S 9 , he was again in Edinburgh for a few days , and he was in it again for the last time on the 6 th December , 1791 . His latter visit must have been short , for he was then in active duty " as an Excise Officer ; and " Clarinda " writes , in her

Private Journal— " 6 th December , 1 S 31—This day I never can forget . Parted with Burns in the year 1791 , never more to meet in this world . Oh ! may we meet in heaven . " It is , however , not said that the Lodge Canongate Kilwinning held any meetings corresponding to these dates . If it did not , Burns could not have attended any . From all I can discover , he does not appear to have attended any

Masonic meetings in Edinburgh subsequent to the winter of 1787 . Great stress is laid by the Iodge on the alleged delay in contradicting Burns' alleged " Inauguration ; " but it was not propounded until 1 S 15 , and then only by the Canongate Lodge itself , the members of which had an interest adverse to its contradiction , It was not until 1846—59 years after

the alleged inauguration—that it was for the first time made known to the public , and then at least one of the reviewers of Marshall ' s " Winter with Burns " publicly doubted the story . Those at that time taking an interest in Freemasonry and in Scottish lodge history did not have access to the lodge ' s records , and had no means of ascertaining whether the statement made by Bro . Marshall was correct

or incorrect . Every biographer of Burns , all his letters , journals , and diaries , and other documents known to the public are silent on the subject . But about 1 S 70 Bro . Murray Lyon , for the purpose of his forthcoming " History of Freemasonry in Scotland , " happened to obtain access to the records of the Lodge Canongate Kilwinning , and it was then for the first time seen , by an independent

and able enquirer , that the pretension of the lodge , and the story of Bro . Marshall were baseless assertions . Bro . Murray Lyon's opinion on the subject having become known , prior to the publication of his history , to the lodge , the Secretary , by instructions , wrote to him enquiring if it were true that he "discredited" the lodge's connection with Burns , and assuring him that there was " ample

evidence " of its existence . The " ample evidence " was not given , but certain statements were made to Bro . Murray Lyon , which he , unfortunately , without enquiry , accepted as correct . He , in consequence , inserted in his History the substance of the statements made to him . I am glad to see that the story oE the jewel alleged to

have been worn by Burns , and the engraving on it , are virtually admitted incorrect . The fact that his name was engraved on a jewel in 1835 goes for nothing as evidence either that he wore it , or that he held the office which it represented . WILLIAM OFFICER , Past G . D . of Scotland .

Royal Masonic Benevolent Institution.

ROYAL MASONIC BENEVOLENT INSTITUTION .

The Committee of Management of the Royal Masonic Benevolent Institution held their first meeting of the year at Freemasons' Hall on Wednesday . Bro . Jabez Hogg , P . G . D ., presided , and there were present Bros . C . A . Cottebrune , P . G . P . ; W . Belchamber , C . Kempton , H . Cox , Chas . G . Hill , E . West , J . Dixon , Hugh Cotter , B . E . Blasby , Thomas Cubitt , P . G . P . ; W . Hilton , Charles

Lacey , J . Newton , A . H . Tattershall , J . J . Berry , W . H . Murlis , Sam Brooks , Hugh M . Hobbs , Alex . Forsyth , Louis Stean , John Larkin , George Mickley , Charles F . Hogard , P . G . Std . Br . ; C . H . Webb , and James Terry , P . G . S . B . ( Secretary ) . The minutes of the previous meeting having been read and verified , the Secretary reported the deaths of two male and one widow annuitants and one male candidate .

The Warden's report for the past month was read , and that of the Finance Committee read and adopted , and ordered to be entered on the minutes . An application from the widow of a deceased annuitant for half her late husband's annuity was acceded to . The report of Bro . Raynham W . Stewart , P . G . D ., as to the purchase of roadway in front of the Institution and the

question of a boundary fence was received . The Committee considered the various petitions , which were iS in number—six men and 12 widows—the result being that five of the men ' s petitions were accepted and 11 widows' petitions accepted and one defend . The proceedings terminated with a vote of thanks to the Chairman .

NEW YEAR'S ENTERTAINMENT TO THE ANNUITANTS . The annual New Year's Entertainment , inaugurated more than 10 years ago by Bro , James Terry , to the annuitants resident in the establishment of the Royal Masonic Benevolent Institution , at Croydon , was given on the premises , on Wednesday , the 2 nd inst ., when the following party of

visitors were _ accommodated by the South-Eastern Railway Company with saloon carriages attached to the 1 . 9 p . m . train from Cannon-street : Bro . C F . Hogard , V . P . ; Bro . T . Hastings Miller , CC , V . P ., and the Misses Miller ; Bro . Thos . Cubitt , V . P . ; Bro , Hugh Cotter and the Misses Cotter ; Bro . John J . Berry , V . P . ; W . J . Crutch , V . P . ; Bro . R . H . Halford , Mrs . Halford , and Miss Halford ; Bro .

Raynham VV . Stewart , V . P . ; Bro . J . Newton , V . P ., Mrs ., and Miss Newton ; Bro . Alex . Mullord and Mrs . Mullord ; Bro . J . A . Farnfield ; Bro . Tongue and Mrs . Tongue and daughters ; Bro . Cooper ; Bro . Henry Cox , V . P . ; Bro . Kempton and Mrs . Kempton ; Bro . Charles G . Hill , V . P ., and Mrs . Hill ; Bro . Tacon and Mrs . Tacon ; Bro . VV . VV . Morgan ; Mrs . Terry and the Misses Terry ; Mr .

and Mrs . Dury ; Bro . H . Massey , Miss A . R . Massey , and Miss Charlotte Massey ; Miss Edith and Miss Gertrude Smith ; the Misses Crutch ; Bro . Raikes and Mrs . Raikes ; Bro . James E . Terry , W . M . 1964 ; Bro . Charles Lacey , V . P . ; Bro . Cohu and Mrs . Cohu ; Mrs . Edmund Terry ; Miss Julia Halford ; Mrs . Moss ; and Mrs . Rovvbottom .

There was an agreeable change in the weather shortly before noon , and , in place of the distressing and dangerous fog with which the previous week had been troubled , a comparatively bright atmosphere prevailed . The visitors arrived at the Institution shortl y before two o ' clock , and received a hearty greeting and New Year's good wishes from Bro . Terry , who might be said to be host on the

occasion , and his energetic assistants , Bros . John Mason and John G . Stevens , and not the least prominent official of the establishment , the Matron , Miss Norris . The distribution of the presents of tea and tobacco to the lady and brother annuitants was first proceeded with , and then the Institution ' s bell was rung to summon all the residents whose health permitted them to leave their homes to the beautiful hall to dinner .

The customary bountiful provision was found by these duly spread , and , Dr . Strong having taken the chair , the dinner commenced , all the brethren acting as carvers and servers of the viands , and the lady visitors sitting down to the repast with the old people . The meal was , as it deserved to be , thoroughly enjoyed by those present , and the old ladies and brethren who were unable to join their

friends were accommodated with their banquet at their own residences . When the dinner was concluded all the company were asked to charge their glasses for the very few toasts which always precede theinterval between the morning and the evening's entertainments , and Dr . STRONG having proposed "The Queen , " and that toast having been duly honoured , proposed "The Founders of the Feast , " in

doing which he informed the company that the entertainment which was started ten years since by Bro . Terry , the Secretary of the Institution , was provided for by certain benevolent , and kind hearted , and true brethren , including those of the Province of East Lancashire , and no portion 0 the cost came out of the subscriptions to the Institution . One of the most delightful results of these gatherings was that

it brought a large number of the same friends together year after year , and enabled them to shake hands andonce more wish each other a Happy New Year . Bro . THOS . HASTINGS MILLER replied , and expressed the gratification all the contributors to the entertainment felt at affording a few hours' enjoyment to their dear old friends , the annuitants , and also to the visitors . The toast of "Success to the Institution , " associated

with the name of the matron , Miss Norris , was also proposed by Dr . SIRONG , who stated that every one who visited the Institution knew the debt they owed to Miss Norris for the valuable assistance she rendered towards the welfare of the residents . She devoted her whole attention and thought to them , and during her temporary holiday for a few days her first anxiety was to be back again to her " children . "

Bro . TERRY , replying for Miss Norris and fori the institutions , said that at these annual gatherings a manifesto was expected from him at a later period of the afternoon , and therefore at present he should content himself with only a few remarks . With regard to the matron , they all knew how well she performed her duties , and he might say that , although he had known her some years , she

certainly did not look any older . She made others happy , and he hoped she would do so for a long time to come . She was one of those who were very rare—only one or two of whom they came across in a generation . No one could discharge her duties better than Miss Norris , and the Committee of Management and the House Committee valued her highly . With respect to the Institution , as the Chairman had

alluded to the circumstance of these happy meetings or festivals . some years ago he ( Bro . Terry ) came down to Croydon and found that the residents in the Institution did not even know each other , and he thought , as a good and true Freemason , there was nothing like having them together at a banquet . Therefore , having spoken to some kind friends on the subject , they banded themselves together and

subscribed out of their own pockets for an entertainment . This had gone on from year to year , and it had grown to what they saw it that day . Of the Institution itself he could say that during the past year it had been successful . It had had the adverse circumstance of the centenary of the Girls ' School , an event the result of which had startled the whole of the Masonic world , as well as the world outside Masonry .

That Festival realised £ 50 , 500 , and'the brethten might be sure that sum could not be eot together by one Institution without the other Institutions suffering . However , the Benevolent Institution had not suffered so much as the Boys' School . The brethren had no doubt seen in the daily papers that the Girls' School received £ 49 , 259 last year . The Benevolent Institution took the

second place , having generally had the first for some years , and been lower only twice in ten years ; they received £ 21 , 361 . The Boys' Institution received only £ 12 , 393 . If they took the whole together , reckoning the Girls at over £ 50 , 000 , they would find that the three Institutions took nearly £ 85 , 000 in 18 S 8 . That sum was never known to have been collected till last year , and it was not

likely to happen this year . But in three years' time the Benevolent Institution would celebrate its jubilee , and if the Girls' School , at its centenary , could , with the Prince of Wales in the chair , get £ 50 , 000 , the brethren connected with the Benevolent Institution would not , at its jubilee , be content with £ 50 , 000 ; they would " pass it by as the idle wind which we regard not . " He did not

expect to see the centenary of this Institution , but he hoped to see its jubilee , and the centenary of the Boys . As to what the Benevolent Institution was doing , he might inform the brethren that they had 430 annuitants on their fund ; 50 residents , male and female , at Croydon , but , still some apartments vacant . The amounts paid by the Institution were about £ 15 , 000 a year . Some 12 years since , the

amount paid was £ 2 Soo , so that in 12 years they had been able to increase the payments , by the generosity of the brethren , to £ 15 , 000 . The present year would be a very eventful one , as the Institution had the largest number of candidates seeking the annuity , and there were only seven vacancies on the Widows' Fund , and it on the Male . That was a bad look out for those seeking admission

. He hoped they would have increased support , and he thanked the brethren for what they had done in the past . Bro . Terry then announced that the East Lancashire brethren were at that moment entertaining the annuitants of East Lancashire to an entertainment at Manchestersimiiar

to this one ; that , besides that , they contributed yearly five guineas to this entertainment at Croydon ; and that he had sent a telegram there conveying best wishes . He was sure the company all missed a brother who always contributed and came to these festivals—Bro . Edgar Bowyer . They all regretted they had lost him ; but he ( Bro . Terry ) had sent a telegram to Mrs . Bowyer .

“The Freemason: 1889-01-12, Page 12” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 19 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fvl/issues/fvl_12011889/page/12/.
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CONTENTS. Article 1
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"ARS QUATUOR CORONATORUM" (No. 2076). Article 2
FREEMASONRY IN SAN FRANCISCO. Article 2
REVIEW. Article 3
Untitled Ad 4
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To Correspondents. Article 5
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Original Correspondence. Article 5
REVIEWS. Article 5
Masonic Notes and Queries. Article 6
REPORTS OF MASONIC MEETINGS. Article 6
INSTRUCTION. Article 10
Royal Arch. Article 10
INSTRUCTION. Article 10
Births, Marriages, and Deaths. Article 10
Mark Masonry. Article 11
Ancient and Accepted Rite. Article 11
Order of the Secret Monitor. Article 11
Egypt. Article 11
THE POET BURNS. Article 11
ROYAL MASONIC BENEVOLENT INSTITUTION. Article 12
GIRLS' SCHOOL HOLIDAY ENTERTAINMENT. Article 13
ROYAL MASONIC INSTITUTION FOR BOYS. Article 13
PRESENTATION OF TESTIMONIAL TO BRO. E. ASHBY. Article 13
THE MASONIC CALENDARS FOR 1889. Article 13
Obituary. Article 13
MASONIC AND GENERAL TIDINGS Article 14
Untitled Ad 15
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WILLING'S SELECTED THEATRICAL PROGRAMME. Article 15
METROPOLITAN MASONIC MEETINGS Article 16
PROVINCIAL MASONIC MEETINGS Article 16
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The Poet Burns.

portraits are portrayed in the picture , and beneath the photograph the following words are printed : "Inauguration of Robert Burns as Poet Laureate of Canongate Kilwinning Lodge , No . 2 . " I presume that Bro . Mackenzie desired his readers to understand that it was a " faithful representation" of the event ? If not , why publish it as such ?

As regards the minute of the ist March , 17 S 7 , Bro . Mackenzie states that , among other business , the lodge met that evening for the purpose " of conferring a tribute of respect on Burns . In the course of the evening , the R . W . Master conferred upon him the title of Poet Laureate of the Lodge , and the minute is signed by the Master , " & c I submit that anyone reading these words

would infer that the minute of that meeting instructed the author ' s statement . But there is no such statement in the minute ! The Secretary of the lodge , in his letter to Bro . Murray Lyon , places the matter in another light . He says , writing by authority , that at the meeting of ist March , 1787 , "it is understood the inauguration took place ; " and in a foot-note there is added , " The reference

to ist March , 17 S 7 , is not embraced in Lyon ' s History . " There was no occasion for embracing such a reference . Bro . Mackenzie says there was , because a Bro . More signed the minutes both of ist March , 17 S 7 , and 9 th June , 1815 . But what of that ? Nothing was said in the March minute of Burns , and there is thus no connection between the two . It is worthy of observation that the

Secretary of the lodge , writing on behalf of "the R . W . M . and office-bearers of the Lodge Canongate Kilwinning , " does not positively say that the "Inauguration" took place , but simply that it rested on an understanding ! . We are told that Bro . William Campbell , at a meeting of the lodge on the 12 th November , 1845 , stated that he had " had many opportunities of giving testimony in favour

of the particulars referred to , that he had travelled in company with Burns , and spent two of the most happy days with him at Auchtertyre Castle . " Whether Brother Campbell met Burns , as here stated , I have no means of knowing . Certainly he did not travel with Burns to Auchtertyre , and Burns , in his letters written from that place and elsewhere , makes no mention of this

brother . As regards the " particulars of which it is said that he had " many opportunities of giving testimony in favour of , " we are not told what these were , nor when , nor where Brother Campbell gave the " testimony " he refers to . But the minute of the lodge of 12 th November , 1845 , quoted in the History , is given at length in "A Winter with Burns , " and the words of the minute as there

quoted differ from the above quotation . As given by Brother Marshall , the minute of the 12 th November , 1 S 45 , reads as follows : " Brother W . C . stated that he was initiated a year or two after the Poet had left Edinburgh , yet he could vouch for the truth of what had been advanced in relation to the tradition of members a few years his seniors . He had himself spent three of the happiest days

of his life in the company of Burns at Auchtertyre House during the Autumn of 17 S 7 . " Tradition , as regards this matter , was thus appealed to before it could have arisen , for statements made so recently as a " year or two , " do not form tradition . Brother Campbell , according to the Grand Lodge Register , joined the Craft some time between February , 1 S 01 , and April , 1802 . If he travelled , as is

said , with Burns in his summer tour of 17 S 7 , he must have been on terms of close personal intimacy with the Poet j and , if the honour in question had been conferred , and so recently , on the Poet , it would , I think , have been spoken of in the course of their intercourse j but this is not said . The letter of Bro . George Simson , P . M . of the lodge , does not aid the lodge ' s contention . All that he says is

embodied in the lodge ' s minute ot 1 S 15 , and I admit the terms of that minute , and that , at that date , for the first time , the lodge claimed Burns as having held the office of its Poet Laureate . The question remains , was that claimfounded on fact ? The registration of the members of the lodge in the Register of Grand Lodge in the beginning of the present century was irregular , but I find from it that Bro .

Simson joined the lodge some time between 180 S and 1815 . He could not , therefore , have been present at the meeting of March , 17 S 7 , and he does not make any statement which he personally could have known . At the time Bro . Simson wrote Burns had been dead 19 years , and his name and genius had become famous throughout the world . Had the lodge on the Poet ' s death claimed him as

its Laureate , referred to the vacancy created by that event or have otherwise noticed it , the claim that the lodge has since put forward would have been rendered probable . But on the Poet ' s death it took no notice of the event in any way , and it passed no expression of commiseration with his afflicted widow and young children . Nor did it take any steps towards the appointment of a successor in its

Laureateship until after the lapse of 39 years ! But in 1815 the Poet ' s name had become renowned , and then those at the head of the lodge ' s affairs stepped forward , and subscribed with a flourish of trumpets 20 guineas towards the erection of a Mausoleum to his memory , and claimed him as its Poet Laureate ! It would have been much more to the lodge's credit had it sent on his death the 20 guineas

to his starving family . Bro . Mackenzie attempts to explain away the omission in his lodge ' s minutes of Burns' election to an office which , according to the minutes , had no existence , by asserting that " the minor office bearers receive but scant notice in the minutes of Scotch lodges , unless indeed as in the case under review , where the brother attained a high standard

of fame after the event ; or the reverse , as in the case of James Hogg , the Ettrick Shepherd . " This is a queer apology ! How could the framers of a lodge's minutes know whether a man was to become famous or otherwise ? The minutes of the Canongate Lodge at the period in question were kept by a practising solicitor . They appear to have been kept with care and ample fulness of detail .

The very minute assuming Burns a member of the lodge , illustrates this fact , for it bears evidence of careful revision , being partially erased in at least two places . The minutes show that the lodge created and elected Hogg to the office of Poet Laureate , but there is no similar entry as regards Burns ; and they further show that since Hogg ' s election the office has been regularly filled . Burn's

fame was in 17 S 7 much greater than that of Hogg in 1835 . Burns only on two occasions resided in Edinburgh continuously , and the dates I gave had reference to those occasions , and not to the short special visits he paid to it subsequently . Brother Marshall evidently considered Burns' residence in Edinburgh , subsequent to March , 1787 , so unconnected with his Masonic life , that he does

The Poet Burns.

not refer to it in his book ; and limits Burns' Masonic career in Edinburgh to the winter of 17 S 6-S 7 . Brother Mackenzie , however , thinks it probable that Burns' visited the Lodge Canongate Kilwinning during the flying visits he refers to . I think that it is much more probable that he spent his time among his numerous friends . But the monthly meetings of the lodge were then

held on the first of every month . Burns , in March , 177 S , came to the city on the ioth and left it on the 15 th of that month . Some time after the 9 th February , 17 S 9 , he was again in Edinburgh for a few days , and he was in it again for the last time on the 6 th December , 1791 . His latter visit must have been short , for he was then in active duty " as an Excise Officer ; and " Clarinda " writes , in her

Private Journal— " 6 th December , 1 S 31—This day I never can forget . Parted with Burns in the year 1791 , never more to meet in this world . Oh ! may we meet in heaven . " It is , however , not said that the Lodge Canongate Kilwinning held any meetings corresponding to these dates . If it did not , Burns could not have attended any . From all I can discover , he does not appear to have attended any

Masonic meetings in Edinburgh subsequent to the winter of 1787 . Great stress is laid by the Iodge on the alleged delay in contradicting Burns' alleged " Inauguration ; " but it was not propounded until 1 S 15 , and then only by the Canongate Lodge itself , the members of which had an interest adverse to its contradiction , It was not until 1846—59 years after

the alleged inauguration—that it was for the first time made known to the public , and then at least one of the reviewers of Marshall ' s " Winter with Burns " publicly doubted the story . Those at that time taking an interest in Freemasonry and in Scottish lodge history did not have access to the lodge ' s records , and had no means of ascertaining whether the statement made by Bro . Marshall was correct

or incorrect . Every biographer of Burns , all his letters , journals , and diaries , and other documents known to the public are silent on the subject . But about 1 S 70 Bro . Murray Lyon , for the purpose of his forthcoming " History of Freemasonry in Scotland , " happened to obtain access to the records of the Lodge Canongate Kilwinning , and it was then for the first time seen , by an independent

and able enquirer , that the pretension of the lodge , and the story of Bro . Marshall were baseless assertions . Bro . Murray Lyon's opinion on the subject having become known , prior to the publication of his history , to the lodge , the Secretary , by instructions , wrote to him enquiring if it were true that he "discredited" the lodge's connection with Burns , and assuring him that there was " ample

evidence " of its existence . The " ample evidence " was not given , but certain statements were made to Bro . Murray Lyon , which he , unfortunately , without enquiry , accepted as correct . He , in consequence , inserted in his History the substance of the statements made to him . I am glad to see that the story oE the jewel alleged to

have been worn by Burns , and the engraving on it , are virtually admitted incorrect . The fact that his name was engraved on a jewel in 1835 goes for nothing as evidence either that he wore it , or that he held the office which it represented . WILLIAM OFFICER , Past G . D . of Scotland .

Royal Masonic Benevolent Institution.

ROYAL MASONIC BENEVOLENT INSTITUTION .

The Committee of Management of the Royal Masonic Benevolent Institution held their first meeting of the year at Freemasons' Hall on Wednesday . Bro . Jabez Hogg , P . G . D ., presided , and there were present Bros . C . A . Cottebrune , P . G . P . ; W . Belchamber , C . Kempton , H . Cox , Chas . G . Hill , E . West , J . Dixon , Hugh Cotter , B . E . Blasby , Thomas Cubitt , P . G . P . ; W . Hilton , Charles

Lacey , J . Newton , A . H . Tattershall , J . J . Berry , W . H . Murlis , Sam Brooks , Hugh M . Hobbs , Alex . Forsyth , Louis Stean , John Larkin , George Mickley , Charles F . Hogard , P . G . Std . Br . ; C . H . Webb , and James Terry , P . G . S . B . ( Secretary ) . The minutes of the previous meeting having been read and verified , the Secretary reported the deaths of two male and one widow annuitants and one male candidate .

The Warden's report for the past month was read , and that of the Finance Committee read and adopted , and ordered to be entered on the minutes . An application from the widow of a deceased annuitant for half her late husband's annuity was acceded to . The report of Bro . Raynham W . Stewart , P . G . D ., as to the purchase of roadway in front of the Institution and the

question of a boundary fence was received . The Committee considered the various petitions , which were iS in number—six men and 12 widows—the result being that five of the men ' s petitions were accepted and 11 widows' petitions accepted and one defend . The proceedings terminated with a vote of thanks to the Chairman .

NEW YEAR'S ENTERTAINMENT TO THE ANNUITANTS . The annual New Year's Entertainment , inaugurated more than 10 years ago by Bro , James Terry , to the annuitants resident in the establishment of the Royal Masonic Benevolent Institution , at Croydon , was given on the premises , on Wednesday , the 2 nd inst ., when the following party of

visitors were _ accommodated by the South-Eastern Railway Company with saloon carriages attached to the 1 . 9 p . m . train from Cannon-street : Bro . C F . Hogard , V . P . ; Bro . T . Hastings Miller , CC , V . P ., and the Misses Miller ; Bro . Thos . Cubitt , V . P . ; Bro , Hugh Cotter and the Misses Cotter ; Bro . John J . Berry , V . P . ; W . J . Crutch , V . P . ; Bro . R . H . Halford , Mrs . Halford , and Miss Halford ; Bro .

Raynham VV . Stewart , V . P . ; Bro . J . Newton , V . P ., Mrs ., and Miss Newton ; Bro . Alex . Mullord and Mrs . Mullord ; Bro . J . A . Farnfield ; Bro . Tongue and Mrs . Tongue and daughters ; Bro . Cooper ; Bro . Henry Cox , V . P . ; Bro . Kempton and Mrs . Kempton ; Bro . Charles G . Hill , V . P ., and Mrs . Hill ; Bro . Tacon and Mrs . Tacon ; Bro . VV . VV . Morgan ; Mrs . Terry and the Misses Terry ; Mr .

and Mrs . Dury ; Bro . H . Massey , Miss A . R . Massey , and Miss Charlotte Massey ; Miss Edith and Miss Gertrude Smith ; the Misses Crutch ; Bro . Raikes and Mrs . Raikes ; Bro . James E . Terry , W . M . 1964 ; Bro . Charles Lacey , V . P . ; Bro . Cohu and Mrs . Cohu ; Mrs . Edmund Terry ; Miss Julia Halford ; Mrs . Moss ; and Mrs . Rovvbottom .

There was an agreeable change in the weather shortly before noon , and , in place of the distressing and dangerous fog with which the previous week had been troubled , a comparatively bright atmosphere prevailed . The visitors arrived at the Institution shortl y before two o ' clock , and received a hearty greeting and New Year's good wishes from Bro . Terry , who might be said to be host on the

occasion , and his energetic assistants , Bros . John Mason and John G . Stevens , and not the least prominent official of the establishment , the Matron , Miss Norris . The distribution of the presents of tea and tobacco to the lady and brother annuitants was first proceeded with , and then the Institution ' s bell was rung to summon all the residents whose health permitted them to leave their homes to the beautiful hall to dinner .

The customary bountiful provision was found by these duly spread , and , Dr . Strong having taken the chair , the dinner commenced , all the brethren acting as carvers and servers of the viands , and the lady visitors sitting down to the repast with the old people . The meal was , as it deserved to be , thoroughly enjoyed by those present , and the old ladies and brethren who were unable to join their

friends were accommodated with their banquet at their own residences . When the dinner was concluded all the company were asked to charge their glasses for the very few toasts which always precede theinterval between the morning and the evening's entertainments , and Dr . STRONG having proposed "The Queen , " and that toast having been duly honoured , proposed "The Founders of the Feast , " in

doing which he informed the company that the entertainment which was started ten years since by Bro . Terry , the Secretary of the Institution , was provided for by certain benevolent , and kind hearted , and true brethren , including those of the Province of East Lancashire , and no portion 0 the cost came out of the subscriptions to the Institution . One of the most delightful results of these gatherings was that

it brought a large number of the same friends together year after year , and enabled them to shake hands andonce more wish each other a Happy New Year . Bro . THOS . HASTINGS MILLER replied , and expressed the gratification all the contributors to the entertainment felt at affording a few hours' enjoyment to their dear old friends , the annuitants , and also to the visitors . The toast of "Success to the Institution , " associated

with the name of the matron , Miss Norris , was also proposed by Dr . SIRONG , who stated that every one who visited the Institution knew the debt they owed to Miss Norris for the valuable assistance she rendered towards the welfare of the residents . She devoted her whole attention and thought to them , and during her temporary holiday for a few days her first anxiety was to be back again to her " children . "

Bro . TERRY , replying for Miss Norris and fori the institutions , said that at these annual gatherings a manifesto was expected from him at a later period of the afternoon , and therefore at present he should content himself with only a few remarks . With regard to the matron , they all knew how well she performed her duties , and he might say that , although he had known her some years , she

certainly did not look any older . She made others happy , and he hoped she would do so for a long time to come . She was one of those who were very rare—only one or two of whom they came across in a generation . No one could discharge her duties better than Miss Norris , and the Committee of Management and the House Committee valued her highly . With respect to the Institution , as the Chairman had

alluded to the circumstance of these happy meetings or festivals . some years ago he ( Bro . Terry ) came down to Croydon and found that the residents in the Institution did not even know each other , and he thought , as a good and true Freemason , there was nothing like having them together at a banquet . Therefore , having spoken to some kind friends on the subject , they banded themselves together and

subscribed out of their own pockets for an entertainment . This had gone on from year to year , and it had grown to what they saw it that day . Of the Institution itself he could say that during the past year it had been successful . It had had the adverse circumstance of the centenary of the Girls ' School , an event the result of which had startled the whole of the Masonic world , as well as the world outside Masonry .

That Festival realised £ 50 , 500 , and'the brethten might be sure that sum could not be eot together by one Institution without the other Institutions suffering . However , the Benevolent Institution had not suffered so much as the Boys' School . The brethren had no doubt seen in the daily papers that the Girls' School received £ 49 , 259 last year . The Benevolent Institution took the

second place , having generally had the first for some years , and been lower only twice in ten years ; they received £ 21 , 361 . The Boys' Institution received only £ 12 , 393 . If they took the whole together , reckoning the Girls at over £ 50 , 000 , they would find that the three Institutions took nearly £ 85 , 000 in 18 S 8 . That sum was never known to have been collected till last year , and it was not

likely to happen this year . But in three years' time the Benevolent Institution would celebrate its jubilee , and if the Girls' School , at its centenary , could , with the Prince of Wales in the chair , get £ 50 , 000 , the brethren connected with the Benevolent Institution would not , at its jubilee , be content with £ 50 , 000 ; they would " pass it by as the idle wind which we regard not . " He did not

expect to see the centenary of this Institution , but he hoped to see its jubilee , and the centenary of the Boys . As to what the Benevolent Institution was doing , he might inform the brethren that they had 430 annuitants on their fund ; 50 residents , male and female , at Croydon , but , still some apartments vacant . The amounts paid by the Institution were about £ 15 , 000 a year . Some 12 years since , the

amount paid was £ 2 Soo , so that in 12 years they had been able to increase the payments , by the generosity of the brethren , to £ 15 , 000 . The present year would be a very eventful one , as the Institution had the largest number of candidates seeking the annuity , and there were only seven vacancies on the Widows' Fund , and it on the Male . That was a bad look out for those seeking admission

. He hoped they would have increased support , and he thanked the brethren for what they had done in the past . Bro . Terry then announced that the East Lancashire brethren were at that moment entertaining the annuitants of East Lancashire to an entertainment at Manchestersimiiar

to this one ; that , besides that , they contributed yearly five guineas to this entertainment at Croydon ; and that he had sent a telegram there conveying best wishes . He was sure the company all missed a brother who always contributed and came to these festivals—Bro . Edgar Bowyer . They all regretted they had lost him ; but he ( Bro . Terry ) had sent a telegram to Mrs . Bowyer .

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