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  • Dec. 16, 1876
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Page 8

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

Ar00800

NOTICE .

The Christmas number of the Freemason will consist of 32 pages , exclusive of wrapper , which will be illustrated in the highest style of the art of wood engraving , and will contain life-like portraits of

H . R . H . the Prince of Wales , M . W . G . M . The Right Hon . Lord Carnarvon , M . W . Pro . G . M The Right Hon . Lord Skelmersdale , R . W Deputy G . M . The Right Hon . Lord Donoughmore , R . W

S . G . W . The Hon . W . Warren Vernon , R . W . J . G . W

Samuel Tomkins , V . W . G . Treas . John Hervey , V . W . G . Sec . The price of this number to non-subscribers will be four pence . To prevent disappointment , it is very necessary that orders should be sent at once to the Office , 19 8 , Fleet-street , or through any newsagent .

To Advertisers.

TO ADVERTISERS .

The Freemason has a large circulation in all parts of the Globe , its advantages as an advertising medium can therefore scarcely be overrated . ADVERTISEMENTS for the CHRISTMAS NUMBER should reach the Office , 19 S Fleet-street , London , by 12 o ' clock on Wednesday .

Ar00802

NOTICE ,

To prevent delay or miscarriage , it is particularly requested that A __ communications for the " Freemason , " may be addressed to the Office , 198 , Fleet-street , London .

Ar00803

IMPORTANT NOTICE .

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

•It is very necessary for our readers to advise us of all money orders they remit , more especially those from the United States of America snd India ; otherwise we cannot tell where to credit them .

To Our Readers.

TO OUR READERS .

The Freemason is a sixteen-page weekly newspaper , price 2 d . It is published every Friday morning , anil contains the most important , interesting , and useful informr . tion relating to Freemasonry in every tlegree . Annual subscription in the United Kingdom , Post free , 10 / 6 . P . O . O . 's to bs made payable at the chief office , London .

NEW POSTAL RATES . Owing to a reduction in the Postal Rates , tile publisher is now enabled to send the "Freemason" to the following parts abroad for One Year for Thirtcen ' . Shillings ( payablein advance ) : —Africa , Australia , Bombay , Canada , Cape of Good Hi' ; ' ; -, Ceylon , China , Constantinople , Demerara , France , Germany , Gibraltar , Jamaica , Malta , Newfoundanil , New South Wales , New Zealand , Suez , Trinidad , United States of America . iV-c .

Answers To Correspondents.

Answers to Correspondents .

Matk Masonry . —1 . No difference . 2 . Yes . . *> . Yes . C L . —Vie cannot vote at all 111 thc lodge in which lie was initinted as a serving brctlur , but can in another lodge , hy |) . T ing Ihe nrjui-itc lodge firs and subscriptions . Report : ; oi Linn nntl bmli Lodge , HJJ ; St . John ' s Lodge , 27 : ) , l . ei ; - « tcr ; nnd Clapu 11 Lotlge of Instruction will nppc ; : r in " :. ' . " * •lex !' .

Births, Marriages, And Deaths.

Births , Marriages , and Deaths .

[ ' 11 ' .. * charge h : > . ( id . for announcements , net exceed ing four lines , under this heading . ]

BIR'I IIS . ATKINSON . —On the , 10 th ult ., at Bnwdon , Cheshire , the wife cf F . G . Atkinson , of a daughter . BAU nn . —On the Sth inst ., at Hope Park , Bromley , thc wife rf A . I . Baker , of a son .

M-uiMi . u . i .. —On thc icth mst ., at The Crescent , Clapham Common , thc wife of VV . Marshall , of a daughter . TAYI . OII . — On the gth inst ., the wife of G . C . Taylor , Esq ., ofa daughter . Wi'tm . —On ihe 10 th inst ., at Haywood Mount , Tenby the wife nf Comr . A . II . Webb , R . N ., of a son .

DEATHS . CiiAi'i . ii- ; . —On the nth inst ., in London , Thomas Hanby Chaplain , B . A ., pged 2 % . GKII-TI i : i . —On the " - ' th inst ., ; it Stike , Devonport , Cecilia Zoffany , willow of the late P . Griffith .

MOIK'AN . —On tbe Sth inst ., at Pope ' s-grove , Twickenham , Linm . i , wife < f . \ . . Mo / g . iu . SAVAU / -. — - On the 12 II 1 ult „ at Sault St . Mary , Canada , Mary Anne , wid . w of Col . J . M . Savage , aged 76 . SMITH . —On the 10 th iti « t „ at The Grange , Shephcrd ' sbush , John Smith , aged 71 .

Ar00807

TheFreemason, SATURDAY , DEC . 16 , il \ " ] 6 .

The Last Quarterly Communication.

THE LAST QUARTERLY COMMUNICATION .

The last meeting of Grand Lodge was neither very long , nor , to say tlie truth , very important , though a good deal of essential business was nevertheless transacted . Onr Royal Grand Master was nominated for re-election , and the hearty applause of the brethren was a good

index to the feelings of our entire Craft . Bro . Clabon was reappointed President of the Lodge of Benevolence , a matter of much gratification to all . Two appeals of some little intricacy , thanks to the lucid exposition of our esteemed Grand Registrar , were adjudicated upon

easily by Grand Lodge . We are to have a special meeting of Grand Lodge to consider the report of the Special Committee . This is , in our opinion , a very wise decision ; and until that report is in our hands , proposals are premature and discus

sion is out of place . We have delegated a special work to a special committee , and until we learn what that committee has to say on the subject , whatever our personal feelings or private notions may be , we must be content to sit still and to hold our tongues .

The Departure Of Our Bro. The Duke Of Abercorn From Ireland.

THE DEPARTURE OF OUR BRO . THE DUKE OF ABERCORN FROM IRELAND .

No one can read the interesting acconnt in the 77 we-. ? of this recent event without being deeply p leased , and not a little moved . There is , and there ought to be , always amongst Englishmen and Freemasons a warm sympathy for Ireland and its warm hearted people . No one can deny

the impulsive nature of the Celt , or that there still lingers amid the population of the " Green Island , " many aspirations and sympathies , which fall on our cold and more phlegmatic Anglo-Saxon temperament somewhat amazedly and coldly , so to say , at times . But his must be a

callous heart , or an ungenerous disposition , who does not feel much of interest in a land which often seems to us to have a very great deal to commend it alike to the caieful consideration of the publicist , the ardent longings of the politician , the dream of the poet , and the rid miration

of the genial hearted . The good government of that important portion of her Majesty ' s Domi nions is indeed a subject of vital importance to us all alike , and every one who has any pretence either to the character of a patriot or a statesman , much less that of a Masonic philosopher ,

will always rejoice to hear of the inward prosperity and onward progress of Ireland . In Bro . the Duke of . Abercorn , Ireland has recently parted with an able ruler and a sagacious administrator . No more popular Lord Lieutenant has ever presided over the graceful hospitality of

Dublin Castle , and the pleasant rule of his kindly administration will long be preserved green nnd fresh in the warm memories of the Irish people . As an Irish landlord , as a prudent and polished , anil fair nnd courteous representative of Her Majesty the Queen , his name will

long be associated , and most favourably too , with those who make up the long list of leading men , who have from time to time , swayed the Viceregal power in Ireland , and the amenities and graces of his family circle will always be remembered with sincere feelings of pride and

admiration . But , as Freemasons , we owe to our brother , the Duke of Abercorn , a warm tribute of grateful acknowledgement , as we / I as a friendly recognition of his many excellencies , social , political , and personal . In an hour of great trial for Freemasonry he was not ashamed to own us as his brethren . When the Craft in

Ireland was mourning their venerable head of many years , the kind and conciliatory " Geraldine , " the Irish Grand Lodge happily offered thc throno of Irish Masonry to Her Majesty ' s representative in that country , their eminent Bro . the Duke

of Abercorn . He at once gallantl y accepted the high honour , even though it exposed him to the virulence * of Ultramontane insult and the turgid utterances of "Cardinal Paul . " Despite the assertions of the ignorant and the

The Departure Of Our Bro. The Duke Of Abercorn From Ireland.

criticisms of the malevolent , he openly declared ' before all men , that he found Freemasonry to be ( as otherwise , he could in his official position have nothing to do with it ) a loyal , peaceable , benevolent order . There is a good deal more in this his act of high courage and straightforward

sincerity , ( in keeping with his entire career ) , than appears at first sight , and as Freemasons , we are bound to remember gratefully that we number him among the rulers of our Craft , and can look on him as a faithful and tried brother of our Order . In common with all classes of the

Irish people , we regret his departure from a country which he has ruled so well , and while his worth and capacity are alike universally acknowledged , and his resignation of his high office truly deplored , may all of good go with him and his family , and in the clime of the sunny

South may he find health and strength , for other duties to his Queen and country . We rejoice to think that his successor , the Duke of Marlborough , is a member of our fraternity , having been originally initiated , we are informed , in the famous Apollo Lodge at Oxford . We doubt

not , that in his hands the prestige of the Lord Lieutenancy will be well maintained , and that under the Regime of his amiable Duchess , the hospitality of Dublin Castle will be dispensed to the cordial satisfaction of all Her Majesty ' s loyal subjects in Ireland .

The Progress Of The Controversy Raised By The French Grand Orient.

THE PROGRESS OF THE CONTROVERSY RAISED BY THE FRENCH GRAND ORIENT .

It is somewhat amusing , though not a little serious , to note how quickly fulfilment has followed prediction , in this " vexata quaestio . " We have already said , that the effect of the

French agitation , and the unwise decision of the Grand Orient would be to produce isolation , and that isolation has already commenced . Indeed , it is not too much to say that the effect of the action of the Grand Orient of France has been

to produce pain and stupefaction 111 other Masonic bodies . Bro . Andre Roussclle seemed to fancy that all such fears were chimerical and groundless , he will we suspect be ready to admit ere very long , that Bro . Behr and others were perfectly right in their

apprehensions and prognostications . Thc Grand Orient of Egypt has already manifested its entire disapproval of the step . By a resolution and decree of Nov . I , unless this motion for removing the belief in God and the Immortality of the Soul be withdrawn , it declines to acknowledge the * Grand Orient of France

as a lawful Masonic power , and withdraws any request for recognition , and refuses any representative on its own behalf , at the Grand Orient of France , or any representative of the Grand Orient of France in tho Grand Orient of Egypt . The aiguments on which the decrees are based seem to bo these : — 1 . That the beli-. f in God is an universal and

unchangeable law of Fieemasons ; and 2 ndly , that the suppression of belief in God , as a necessary condition of admission , must not only lead to other consequences , but must inevitably drive out of Freemasonry all believers in God . To the Grand Oiient of Egypt , 'such a step appears ,

as to us , a R I-VOI . UTION ' . We have never concealed our opinion of tho mistaken and worse than mistaken policy which has resulted in such a dead-lock for the Grand Orient of France , as this resolution will prove to be if carried out . We conceive it to be an act of childish folly , only

equalled by its mischievous perversity . Despite the eloquence and ability by which this measure has been defended , eloquence and ability deserving of a better cause to support , we , from the first , have pointed out in language nearly similar to that of the Grand Orient of Egypt , what thc

effect would be on other bodies . and how seriously the whole Masonic edifice was shaken by such a breach in its constitutional foundation . AVe still trust that there is time for tlie Grand Orient of France to retrace its steps . For of one thing

we feel sure—of course wc speak with no authority beyond our own opinion—that if by any official act , the belief in the existence of God and thc Immortality of the Soul is openly repudiated by French Freemasonry , it will be

“The Freemason: 1876-12-16, Page 8” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 1 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fvl/issues/fvl_16121876/page/8/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
CONTENTS. Article 1
REPORTS OF MASONIC MEETINGS. Article 1
Royal Arch. Article 4
Red Cross of Constantine. Article 5
Scotland. Article 5
GRAND LODGE OF SCOTLAND. Article 7
CEREMONIAL AT WAKEFIELD. Article 7
Untitled Article 8
TO ADVERTISERS. Article 8
Untitled Article 8
Untitled Article 8
TO OUR READERS. Article 8
Answers to Correspondents. Article 8
Births, Marriages, and Deaths. Article 8
Untitled Article 8
THE LAST QUARTERLY COMMUNICATION. Article 8
THE DEPARTURE OF OUR BRO. THE DUKE OF ABERCORN FROM IRELAND. Article 8
THE PROGRESS OF THE CONTROVERSY RAISED BY THE FRENCH GRAND ORIENT. Article 8
SOME FRESH ROMAN CATHOLIC ATTACKS ON FREEMASONRY. Article 9
Original Correspondence. Article 9
THE ORDER OF THE TEMPLE. Article 10
CONSECRATION OF THE STUDHOLME MARK LODGE, No. 197. Article 11
PROVINCIAL GRAND MARK LODGE OF LINCOLNSHIRE. Article 11
ROYAL MASONIC BENEVOLENT INSTITUTION. Article 12
Masonic and General Tidings. Article 13
FREEMASONRY IN NEW ZEALAND. Article 13
Obituary. Article 13
METROPOLITAN MASONIC MEETINGS. Article 13
MASONIC MEETINGS IN WEST LANCASHIRE AND CHESHIRE. Article 14
MASONIC MEETINGS IN GLASGOW AND WEST OF SCOTLAND. Article 14
MASONIC MEETINGS IN EDINBURGH AND VICINITY. Article 14
Untitled Ad 14
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Ar00800

NOTICE .

The Christmas number of the Freemason will consist of 32 pages , exclusive of wrapper , which will be illustrated in the highest style of the art of wood engraving , and will contain life-like portraits of

H . R . H . the Prince of Wales , M . W . G . M . The Right Hon . Lord Carnarvon , M . W . Pro . G . M The Right Hon . Lord Skelmersdale , R . W Deputy G . M . The Right Hon . Lord Donoughmore , R . W

S . G . W . The Hon . W . Warren Vernon , R . W . J . G . W

Samuel Tomkins , V . W . G . Treas . John Hervey , V . W . G . Sec . The price of this number to non-subscribers will be four pence . To prevent disappointment , it is very necessary that orders should be sent at once to the Office , 19 8 , Fleet-street , or through any newsagent .

To Advertisers.

TO ADVERTISERS .

The Freemason has a large circulation in all parts of the Globe , its advantages as an advertising medium can therefore scarcely be overrated . ADVERTISEMENTS for the CHRISTMAS NUMBER should reach the Office , 19 S Fleet-street , London , by 12 o ' clock on Wednesday .

Ar00802

NOTICE ,

To prevent delay or miscarriage , it is particularly requested that A __ communications for the " Freemason , " may be addressed to the Office , 198 , Fleet-street , London .

Ar00803

IMPORTANT NOTICE .

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

•It is very necessary for our readers to advise us of all money orders they remit , more especially those from the United States of America snd India ; otherwise we cannot tell where to credit them .

To Our Readers.

TO OUR READERS .

The Freemason is a sixteen-page weekly newspaper , price 2 d . It is published every Friday morning , anil contains the most important , interesting , and useful informr . tion relating to Freemasonry in every tlegree . Annual subscription in the United Kingdom , Post free , 10 / 6 . P . O . O . 's to bs made payable at the chief office , London .

NEW POSTAL RATES . Owing to a reduction in the Postal Rates , tile publisher is now enabled to send the "Freemason" to the following parts abroad for One Year for Thirtcen ' . Shillings ( payablein advance ) : —Africa , Australia , Bombay , Canada , Cape of Good Hi' ; ' ; -, Ceylon , China , Constantinople , Demerara , France , Germany , Gibraltar , Jamaica , Malta , Newfoundanil , New South Wales , New Zealand , Suez , Trinidad , United States of America . iV-c .

Answers To Correspondents.

Answers to Correspondents .

Matk Masonry . —1 . No difference . 2 . Yes . . *> . Yes . C L . —Vie cannot vote at all 111 thc lodge in which lie was initinted as a serving brctlur , but can in another lodge , hy |) . T ing Ihe nrjui-itc lodge firs and subscriptions . Report : ; oi Linn nntl bmli Lodge , HJJ ; St . John ' s Lodge , 27 : ) , l . ei ; - « tcr ; nnd Clapu 11 Lotlge of Instruction will nppc ; : r in " :. ' . " * •lex !' .

Births, Marriages, And Deaths.

Births , Marriages , and Deaths .

[ ' 11 ' .. * charge h : > . ( id . for announcements , net exceed ing four lines , under this heading . ]

BIR'I IIS . ATKINSON . —On the , 10 th ult ., at Bnwdon , Cheshire , the wife cf F . G . Atkinson , of a daughter . BAU nn . —On the Sth inst ., at Hope Park , Bromley , thc wife rf A . I . Baker , of a son .

M-uiMi . u . i .. —On thc icth mst ., at The Crescent , Clapham Common , thc wife of VV . Marshall , of a daughter . TAYI . OII . — On the gth inst ., the wife of G . C . Taylor , Esq ., ofa daughter . Wi'tm . —On ihe 10 th inst ., at Haywood Mount , Tenby the wife nf Comr . A . II . Webb , R . N ., of a son .

DEATHS . CiiAi'i . ii- ; . —On the nth inst ., in London , Thomas Hanby Chaplain , B . A ., pged 2 % . GKII-TI i : i . —On the " - ' th inst ., ; it Stike , Devonport , Cecilia Zoffany , willow of the late P . Griffith .

MOIK'AN . —On tbe Sth inst ., at Pope ' s-grove , Twickenham , Linm . i , wife < f . \ . . Mo / g . iu . SAVAU / -. — - On the 12 II 1 ult „ at Sault St . Mary , Canada , Mary Anne , wid . w of Col . J . M . Savage , aged 76 . SMITH . —On the 10 th iti « t „ at The Grange , Shephcrd ' sbush , John Smith , aged 71 .

Ar00807

TheFreemason, SATURDAY , DEC . 16 , il \ " ] 6 .

The Last Quarterly Communication.

THE LAST QUARTERLY COMMUNICATION .

The last meeting of Grand Lodge was neither very long , nor , to say tlie truth , very important , though a good deal of essential business was nevertheless transacted . Onr Royal Grand Master was nominated for re-election , and the hearty applause of the brethren was a good

index to the feelings of our entire Craft . Bro . Clabon was reappointed President of the Lodge of Benevolence , a matter of much gratification to all . Two appeals of some little intricacy , thanks to the lucid exposition of our esteemed Grand Registrar , were adjudicated upon

easily by Grand Lodge . We are to have a special meeting of Grand Lodge to consider the report of the Special Committee . This is , in our opinion , a very wise decision ; and until that report is in our hands , proposals are premature and discus

sion is out of place . We have delegated a special work to a special committee , and until we learn what that committee has to say on the subject , whatever our personal feelings or private notions may be , we must be content to sit still and to hold our tongues .

The Departure Of Our Bro. The Duke Of Abercorn From Ireland.

THE DEPARTURE OF OUR BRO . THE DUKE OF ABERCORN FROM IRELAND .

No one can read the interesting acconnt in the 77 we-. ? of this recent event without being deeply p leased , and not a little moved . There is , and there ought to be , always amongst Englishmen and Freemasons a warm sympathy for Ireland and its warm hearted people . No one can deny

the impulsive nature of the Celt , or that there still lingers amid the population of the " Green Island , " many aspirations and sympathies , which fall on our cold and more phlegmatic Anglo-Saxon temperament somewhat amazedly and coldly , so to say , at times . But his must be a

callous heart , or an ungenerous disposition , who does not feel much of interest in a land which often seems to us to have a very great deal to commend it alike to the caieful consideration of the publicist , the ardent longings of the politician , the dream of the poet , and the rid miration

of the genial hearted . The good government of that important portion of her Majesty ' s Domi nions is indeed a subject of vital importance to us all alike , and every one who has any pretence either to the character of a patriot or a statesman , much less that of a Masonic philosopher ,

will always rejoice to hear of the inward prosperity and onward progress of Ireland . In Bro . the Duke of . Abercorn , Ireland has recently parted with an able ruler and a sagacious administrator . No more popular Lord Lieutenant has ever presided over the graceful hospitality of

Dublin Castle , and the pleasant rule of his kindly administration will long be preserved green nnd fresh in the warm memories of the Irish people . As an Irish landlord , as a prudent and polished , anil fair nnd courteous representative of Her Majesty the Queen , his name will

long be associated , and most favourably too , with those who make up the long list of leading men , who have from time to time , swayed the Viceregal power in Ireland , and the amenities and graces of his family circle will always be remembered with sincere feelings of pride and

admiration . But , as Freemasons , we owe to our brother , the Duke of Abercorn , a warm tribute of grateful acknowledgement , as we / I as a friendly recognition of his many excellencies , social , political , and personal . In an hour of great trial for Freemasonry he was not ashamed to own us as his brethren . When the Craft in

Ireland was mourning their venerable head of many years , the kind and conciliatory " Geraldine , " the Irish Grand Lodge happily offered thc throno of Irish Masonry to Her Majesty ' s representative in that country , their eminent Bro . the Duke

of Abercorn . He at once gallantl y accepted the high honour , even though it exposed him to the virulence * of Ultramontane insult and the turgid utterances of "Cardinal Paul . " Despite the assertions of the ignorant and the

The Departure Of Our Bro. The Duke Of Abercorn From Ireland.

criticisms of the malevolent , he openly declared ' before all men , that he found Freemasonry to be ( as otherwise , he could in his official position have nothing to do with it ) a loyal , peaceable , benevolent order . There is a good deal more in this his act of high courage and straightforward

sincerity , ( in keeping with his entire career ) , than appears at first sight , and as Freemasons , we are bound to remember gratefully that we number him among the rulers of our Craft , and can look on him as a faithful and tried brother of our Order . In common with all classes of the

Irish people , we regret his departure from a country which he has ruled so well , and while his worth and capacity are alike universally acknowledged , and his resignation of his high office truly deplored , may all of good go with him and his family , and in the clime of the sunny

South may he find health and strength , for other duties to his Queen and country . We rejoice to think that his successor , the Duke of Marlborough , is a member of our fraternity , having been originally initiated , we are informed , in the famous Apollo Lodge at Oxford . We doubt

not , that in his hands the prestige of the Lord Lieutenancy will be well maintained , and that under the Regime of his amiable Duchess , the hospitality of Dublin Castle will be dispensed to the cordial satisfaction of all Her Majesty ' s loyal subjects in Ireland .

The Progress Of The Controversy Raised By The French Grand Orient.

THE PROGRESS OF THE CONTROVERSY RAISED BY THE FRENCH GRAND ORIENT .

It is somewhat amusing , though not a little serious , to note how quickly fulfilment has followed prediction , in this " vexata quaestio . " We have already said , that the effect of the

French agitation , and the unwise decision of the Grand Orient would be to produce isolation , and that isolation has already commenced . Indeed , it is not too much to say that the effect of the action of the Grand Orient of France has been

to produce pain and stupefaction 111 other Masonic bodies . Bro . Andre Roussclle seemed to fancy that all such fears were chimerical and groundless , he will we suspect be ready to admit ere very long , that Bro . Behr and others were perfectly right in their

apprehensions and prognostications . Thc Grand Orient of Egypt has already manifested its entire disapproval of the step . By a resolution and decree of Nov . I , unless this motion for removing the belief in God and the Immortality of the Soul be withdrawn , it declines to acknowledge the * Grand Orient of France

as a lawful Masonic power , and withdraws any request for recognition , and refuses any representative on its own behalf , at the Grand Orient of France , or any representative of the Grand Orient of France in tho Grand Orient of Egypt . The aiguments on which the decrees are based seem to bo these : — 1 . That the beli-. f in God is an universal and

unchangeable law of Fieemasons ; and 2 ndly , that the suppression of belief in God , as a necessary condition of admission , must not only lead to other consequences , but must inevitably drive out of Freemasonry all believers in God . To the Grand Oiient of Egypt , 'such a step appears ,

as to us , a R I-VOI . UTION ' . We have never concealed our opinion of tho mistaken and worse than mistaken policy which has resulted in such a dead-lock for the Grand Orient of France , as this resolution will prove to be if carried out . We conceive it to be an act of childish folly , only

equalled by its mischievous perversity . Despite the eloquence and ability by which this measure has been defended , eloquence and ability deserving of a better cause to support , we , from the first , have pointed out in language nearly similar to that of the Grand Orient of Egypt , what thc

effect would be on other bodies . and how seriously the whole Masonic edifice was shaken by such a breach in its constitutional foundation . AVe still trust that there is time for tlie Grand Orient of France to retrace its steps . For of one thing

we feel sure—of course wc speak with no authority beyond our own opinion—that if by any official act , the belief in the existence of God and thc Immortality of the Soul is openly repudiated by French Freemasonry , it will be

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