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  • Jan. 19, 1878
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Original Correspondence.

proper sense of the word " jobbery , " no such term can fairly or fitly he applied to our Masonic elections . But it is quite clear to me , that Brti . Simpson uses the word in a sense peculiar to himself , namely , in order to carry out certain precdnceived notions of what he deems a needful reform . He has olten expressed his opinion on the " interchange of votes , " which he declares to be "jobbery , "

and denounces as jobbery , though he has not a shadow of proof to bring forward in support of his assertion , and though he has been answered over and over again in your pages , I contend that the whole of his proposition rests upon an assumption , and that his contention is alike mistaken and untowartl . Yet on this " dictum " laid down by the " Lord knows who , " and certainly not infallible ,

I beg to observe that Bro . Simpson denounces our charitable elections as " jobbery , " aud does not even spare his brethren in Masonry . Dr . Johnson defines "job " to be a "low , mean , lucrative , busy affair , " and "jobber" to be " one who sells stocks in the public funds . " In process of time " jobbery " has come to signify , as it has been well put by some one , a

ccrrupt transaction which is brought about from interested motives or personal feeling , without any consideration for the " fitness of things , " or " pro bono publico . " I ask , somewhat indignantly , I confess , is this a fitting description by a brother Mason of our Masonic elections . I fancy that there will be but one equally indignant reply in the Craft .

As a proof how hollow is the cry for " voting reform and how unwise it is to trust to committees alone , I call attention to a recent case in one of our charities which 1 for one should not have been surprised if Bro . Simpson , taking the " high moral line , " or any other line you like , had eloquently denounced , as approaching the confines of " jobbery , "—for obvious reasons I name no names ,

though the case is well known now to most of us . The case is simply this . The father of the poor orphan , having subscribed to a colonial lodge for two years , ( this was the maximum , if even this was obtained ) , leaves Masonry , and dies out of Masonry seven years later . The orphan ' s claim is recommended by an influential committee , brought forward , strongly supported at thc General

Committee , antl , despite its obvious infraction of the laws of the institution , carried persistently by a large ma j ority . I note in the list of leading Masons who originally supportctl the ca . se the name of our esteemed Bro . R . J . Simpson himself . I admit , however , that in the October circular his name had been withdrawn . Now locking at the case simply as an act of

Masonic law and cejuity , I , for one , feel that if any matter might be fairly deemed more deleterious in itself or more prejudicial to the charity , or more unfair to those many brethren who live and die in Masonry , and whose orphans cannot get into the School , this is thc case " par excellence , " as the French would say . It is the " . weakest case I have ever known , " as was well remarked

in a correspondence which appeared a short time back in thc Freemason , and I hope never to sec another like it . I quite agree with Bro . Simpson when he says so eloquently , " I siy it quietly , dispassionately , and deliberately , and I am quite sure that investigation into the different claims of candidates forms one of the first necessities of our charities being properly worked ; and secondly , that

the more we carry our charities out of the happy-go-lucky and haphazard system into the intelligent antl deserving category the better it will be . " But how does this admirable lesson of administration accord with the recent case , which was one of the most " haphazard happy-golucky " proceedings I ever heartl of , and which convinces me that committees want looking after as much as

subscribers r I am inclined to hope that Beo . Simpson said a little more than he meant in the fervour of his eloquence , and that he may on second thoughts be willing to withdraw so objectionable a word as "jobbery . " If he has no other excuse , he can make use of the one put forward by a speaker at a large dinner , in a town wilh which Bro . Simpson is well acquainted , when having made a signal blunder he excused

himself thus happily , and amid thc loud applause of the company . " Gentlemen , I am sorry for what 1 have just said , but I have lost , gentlemen , one of my front teeth , and wor s will come out , gentlemen , nolens volens . " I shall be glad to see a disclaimer in your pages from our worthy brother , the P . G . C . I am , dear Sir and Brother , yours most fraternally , AN OLD STEWARD FOR THE CHARITIES .

THE GRAND ORIENT OF FRANCE . To the Editor if Ihe " Freemason . " Dear Sir and Brother , — Thtre is , it seems , no doubt that the Grand Orient of France will be excommunicated by the Angle-Saxon Grand Lodges , and therefore the union of the Craft be dissolved . This unhappy fact is only to be regretted , not more to be hindered .

Allow me to ask or . ee more , what has the Grantl Orient of France dene in its last vote ? It has eliminated a . profession of faith from its constitutions which docs net belong to Masonic law , and which was not in thc French Constitutions before . The Grantl Orient has at present a similar law as the German Grantl Lodges . For thtre was never in any German Grand Lotlge a passusorS .

( MC ) concerning the belief in God , nor is this the case in the General Regu ' . ilitin ** , the fundamental Masonic principles adopted by the German Giand Lodge League . Never has an ) German Grand Lodge asked a candidate before he was initiated as to his belief whatever , and , nevertheless

the Grantl Lodge of England has found faith with German Masonry . A hundred ycars ago the great philosopher , J . G . Fichte , was initialed , notwithstanding he was denounced by his contemporaries as an Atheist . Bro , Fichte was a man of the highest moral worth , a

Original Correspondence.

perfect Mason , and my German brethren are proud of such a member of the Craft . Wc have at present a great number of brethren in our lodges who do not believe in a " personal " God , and are convinced that the question of a " Creator" of the world is not a religious but only a physical question , a question on the cause of casuality in general . These non-believing brethren belong to our best

and worthiest Masons , and they are loved and venerated without regard to their belief or non-belief , as in Germany the lodges only ask whether the candidate is a moral and educated man or not . We consitler the Craft as a purely moral institution , and securing freedom of conscience and profession , and acknowledge each honest and true conviction . All this has only reference to the individual brother Mason ; the lodge as such and the Craft as such

acknowledge thc Great Architect of thc Universe . If the Grand Orient of France , who has not voted against the belief in God , has committed a Masonic crime , then all continental Masonry is guilty of the same crime . No Masonic Popery can prevent continental Masons from being convinced that absolute freetlom of conscience is the true meaning of our Royal Art . Believe me , dear Brother , most fraternally yours , J . G . FINDEL .

THE ORDER OF ST . JOHN . 7 b the Editor of the " Freemason . " Dear Sir and Brother , — I observe that in your issue of the jth inst . you ask for information respecting the perpetuation and continuation of the Order of St John in England . The following is the account of the same , given bv the

existing Order of St . John of Jerusalem in Auglia , and put forth by them in their brief notice of the Order , & c , in 1874 : — "In the ) ear 1826 the five associated branches of thc Order projected the revival of the dormant Langue of England , and negociations were entered into with thc Rev . Sir Robert Peat , D . D ., G . C . S ., Chaplain to King George

IV ., and other English gentlemen , who consented to aid in the re-establishment of the Order in England , and at a chapter assembled in Paris , antl representing the great majority of five of the then existing divisions of the Order , the resuscitation of the Order in England was resolved . The Chevalier de Chastelain was tleputed to attend a meeting convened at London of Englishmen interested in the

project , when he formally revived the English Langue , and invested the Rev . Sir Rojert Peat with the functions and authority of Grand Prior of England . This is the utmost amount of authority claimed by the existing Order for their assumption of the titles of the Knights Hospitaller , whose members were the defenders of Christendom for so many years .

I should like to call the attention of your readers to a few facts respecting this last-named Order . On the 29 th November , 1797 , the Emperor Paul I . of Russia assumed the title ot Protector of the Order of Malta . On the 27 th Oct . 179 8 , the same Emperor was proclaimed Grand Master of the Order , ( the last Grand Master of the Order , who was duly elected according to the constitution of the

Order , namely , Ferdinand Von Hampesch , being still living ) . On the 6 th July , 1799 , a formal abdication of the Grand Mastership by Ferdinand Von Hampesch in favour of the Emperor Paul was made and forwarded to St . Petersburgh . On the 20 th July , 1801 , the Sacred Council of the

Sovereign Order of St . John of Jerusalem , being then assembled at St . Petersburgh , published a proclamation setting forth the mode of election of a Grand Master in the place of the Emperor Paul , then deceased . On the 27 th of June , 1802 , John de Tommasi was elected Grand Master in pursuance of the last mentioned proclamation . De Tommasi was succeeded in 1805 by Guevara

Luardo , who was followed in 1814 by Andre di Giovannj Centclleo , in 1821 by Antoine Busca , and in 1834 by Carlo de Candida . On di Canelida ' s death , Count Colloredo was elected , and in 18 5 8 he was slid Grantl Master . Thc further devolution of the office I have not been able to trace satisfactorily , but I believe it to be vested in thc Marquis de Santa Crccc , who appears to have been elected in 1872 .

The English Order of St . John , although revived in the manner I have before quoted , has never been recognised by the Sacrctl Council , nor by any of the Giand Masters before mentioned . In a publication , datctl 1841 , and emanating from the Chancery of the British Langue ( the revived Order ) , I fuul the name of M . Carlo tie Candida set down as that of the

Grand Master , ad interim . It appears from this lhat within 7 ycars from their formation , the English Langue fully recognised the then Grantl Master of the Order , as duly appointed , and that it was only on the lefusal of recognition by thc General Council that they thought of disputing their p * m * er or authority . I shoultl be the last to disparage the many good works done by thc members of the revived Order , but I share thc

objections stated by the correspondent of the time ' , whose letter you quote , to persons sailing under borrowed colours , antl I hope that Sir Edward E . A . H . Lechmerc , or some other member of the revived Order , will be able to fully prove the title of its members to the names and reputation tbat they claim as their own . Apologising for this trespass on your valuable space , I am yours fraternally , PANACHE .

[ The following is Colonel Porter ' s able letter which has frequently been referred to in the discussion . Ed . ] To the Editor if the " Times . " Sir , —May I ask your permission to add a few words to the controversy between the most noble the Marquis of Carabas , K . G ., and Sir E . Lechmerc on the subject of Pretenders . '

Original Correspondence.

It behoves those who bring forward accusations as to the wrongful assumption of titles to be very careful that they do not fall into a similar error . Our friend the Marquis states that the English branch of the Order of St . John , of which Sir E . Lechmere is the valued Secretary-General , is not recognised by the Grand Master of the Order . May I ask the Marquis who is this Grand Master ? I have for

many years made the history of the Order of St . John a favourite study , and am naw startled to discover the existence of a dignity which I had deemed extinct . Hitherto , I have been led to believe that the last Grand Master of thc Order was Ferdinand Hotnpesch , who surrendered the island of Malta to Napoleon in 1798 . Although the Emperor Paul of Russia afterwards assumed the dignity ,

his right thereto was never recognised , and after his death I have always imagined that the office fell into abeyance . Perhaps " Carabas , K . G ., " can inform me who the present holder is , and how he was elected . As regards the dispute between "Carabas , K . G ., " and Sir E . Lechmere , the real truth seems to be this—Neither the fragment of the Order resident at Rome under the

patronage of the Pope , nor that other important , but now extinct , fragment , consisting of thc three French langues , to whom our English branch owes its revival , possessed the power of exclusive jurisdiction . The English langue claims its right of affiliation through the latter , and the former is powerless to deny it . It is a very pretty quarrel , and will not be set at rest by such attacks as those of " Carabas , K . G . " The English

branch has bestirred itself to work in accordance with the intentions of the original founders , and is consequently yearly growing in influence and numbers . Let the Roman branch follow our example . They will by so doing act far better up to thc motto of the Order , " Pro utilitate hominum , " than by useless attacks upon our raison d ' etre . WHITWORTH PORTER , Colonel Royal Engineers .

To the Editor of thc " Times . " Sir , —Colonel Whitworth Porter docs me the honour to descend into the lists antl challenge my accuracy , because I usetl the term " Grand Master" in the letter you were so good as to insert in The Times . The Colonel raises thereby an entirely distinct issue from that to which I have hithertc addressed myself . Permit

me to add a few words on this subject at thc end of this letter which I hope will give the Colonel a sufficient answer to his question , " Who is this Grand Master ?" Our question is a different one—viz ., whether the asso » ciation to which the Colonel and Sir E . Lechmere and so many more honourable and excellent men belong is a legitimate branch , or a branch at all , of the historic Order

of St . John of Jerusalem , commonly called the Knights ot Malta . If Colonel Porter will turn to page 821 of the "Almanach de Gotha" ft . r the present year , 1878 , he will find , under the heading "Ordre Souvcrain de S . Jean de Jerusalem , " the style and name of our present head as follows— " Lieutenant Grand Matire , le bailli fra Ceschi a Santa Croce ( e'lu le 14 Fevrier , 1871 ) . " Then follow the

names of the Council of the Gran-Magistero—viz ., the four Grand Priors of Rome , Bohemia , the Lombard-Venetian , and the Two Sicilies , the Vice-Chancellor of the Order , & c . After the Italian Priories and tbe German Langu c follow the Associations de Chevaliers d' Honneur et Devotion—viz ., 1 . thc Rhenane—Westphalian ; 2 , the Silesian ; and 3 , the English , whose President is the Earl

Granard . The fact , then , is as I have stated—that though the asscciation calling themselves Knights of St . John maybe a philanthropic society doing much good , as I am glad to hear from Colonel Porter , it is not a recognised portion of the Order ot Malta ; in a word , it has made itself . Now to conclude with a word about my use of the

term " Grand Master . " Colonel Porter's historic researches are accurate when he tells us that Count Hompesch was our last Grand Master in the strict sense of the words , but they have led him into eiror if he supposes that the Order remained in an acephalous condition when the sovereignty of Malta was wrested from it by the French ( to be ceded by them in turn to England , in trust for the Order , be it

said en passant , by the Treaty of Amiens ) . On thc contrary , thc ofiice was , antl is still , filled by Lieutenant Grantl Masters , in regular succession , and elected by the statutable officers of thc Order . 1 he Lieutenant Grand Master , the Bailli Brother Ceschi a Santa Croce , and his council and officers , arc , therefore , distinctly not a " fragment , " as Colonel Porter says , but thc legitimate and

sole head and governing botly of the Order , exercising alone the sovereign rights still remaining to them ; such , for instance , as that cf sending a Minister-Plenipotentiary and Envoy-Extraordinary , who resides anil is received as such at the Impt rial and Royal Couit of Vienna . The reason why our Grand Master is styled " Lieutenant" is that his dignity as a Sovereign Prince , recognised by all the

crowned heads of Europe , was such that when deprived of his dominions it was felt that a Lieutenancy , or Commission as it would be called if vested in more than one , as the Lord Lieutenancy of London is held in commission , if I mistake not , was more suited to his fallen fortunes . Lit mc add but two more "last words . " Colonel Whitworth Poiter himself embodies the whole question at issue .

He signs , Colonel Royal Artillery . " I look to the " Army List" and find him in his proper place there . He and his friends say they are members of the Order of St . John . I look in our ollic ' ul list , and lo , they are not!—neither they nor their Secretary- General , nor anything that is theirs . I wish them well , I shall be most glad to

show them over our little " good work , " the stately Church and useful Hospital of St . John and St . Elizabeth in Great Ormond-street ; but I must once more , and finally , assert that it ii only in the sense in which they are Knights of St . John that I am , Sir , your obedient servant , CARABAS , K . G .

“The Freemason: 1878-01-19, Page 6” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 20 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fvl/issues/fvl_19011878/page/6/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
CONTENTS. Article 1
REPORTS OF MASONIC MEETINGS. Article 1
Royal Arch. Article 4
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 4
ONE OF THE GREATEST HIN DRANGES TO MASONIC LITER ATURE. Article 5
TIME'S REVOLUTIONS. Article 5
Original Correspondence. Article 5
CONSECRATION OF THE CHOLMELEY LODGE, No. 1731. Article 7
Reviews. Article 7
Masonic and General Tidings. Article 8
CENTENARY OF THE MOUNT LEBANON LODGE, No. 73. Article 8
ROYAL MASONIC INSTITUTION FOR GIRLS. Article 9
ROYAL MASONIC INSTITUTION FOR BOYS. Article 9
THE ANNUAL MASONIC BALL AT LIVERPOOL. Article 10
Ireland. Article 10
Public Amusements. Article 10
THE LATE KING OF ITALY. Article 10
Obituary. Article 11
ORDER OF HIGH PRIESTHOOD. Article 11
R.M.I.B. OLD SCHOLARS' REUNION. Article 11
NOTES ON ART, &c. Article 11
Untitled Article 12
Untitled Article 12
Untitled Article 12
Answers to Correspondents. Article 12
Births ,Marriages and Deaths. Article 12
Untitled Article 12
THE LAST QUARTERLY COURT OF THE GIRLS' SCHOOL. Article 12
CHARITABLE ADMINISTRATION. Article 12
MASONIC BALL AT BLACKBURN AND PRESENTATION TO BRO. LE GENDRE N. STARKIE. Article 14
Untitled Article 16
METROPOLITAN MASONIC MEETINGS. Article 16
Untitled Ad 16
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Original Correspondence.

proper sense of the word " jobbery , " no such term can fairly or fitly he applied to our Masonic elections . But it is quite clear to me , that Brti . Simpson uses the word in a sense peculiar to himself , namely , in order to carry out certain precdnceived notions of what he deems a needful reform . He has olten expressed his opinion on the " interchange of votes , " which he declares to be "jobbery , "

and denounces as jobbery , though he has not a shadow of proof to bring forward in support of his assertion , and though he has been answered over and over again in your pages , I contend that the whole of his proposition rests upon an assumption , and that his contention is alike mistaken and untowartl . Yet on this " dictum " laid down by the " Lord knows who , " and certainly not infallible ,

I beg to observe that Bro . Simpson denounces our charitable elections as " jobbery , " aud does not even spare his brethren in Masonry . Dr . Johnson defines "job " to be a "low , mean , lucrative , busy affair , " and "jobber" to be " one who sells stocks in the public funds . " In process of time " jobbery " has come to signify , as it has been well put by some one , a

ccrrupt transaction which is brought about from interested motives or personal feeling , without any consideration for the " fitness of things , " or " pro bono publico . " I ask , somewhat indignantly , I confess , is this a fitting description by a brother Mason of our Masonic elections . I fancy that there will be but one equally indignant reply in the Craft .

As a proof how hollow is the cry for " voting reform and how unwise it is to trust to committees alone , I call attention to a recent case in one of our charities which 1 for one should not have been surprised if Bro . Simpson , taking the " high moral line , " or any other line you like , had eloquently denounced , as approaching the confines of " jobbery , "—for obvious reasons I name no names ,

though the case is well known now to most of us . The case is simply this . The father of the poor orphan , having subscribed to a colonial lodge for two years , ( this was the maximum , if even this was obtained ) , leaves Masonry , and dies out of Masonry seven years later . The orphan ' s claim is recommended by an influential committee , brought forward , strongly supported at thc General

Committee , antl , despite its obvious infraction of the laws of the institution , carried persistently by a large ma j ority . I note in the list of leading Masons who originally supportctl the ca . se the name of our esteemed Bro . R . J . Simpson himself . I admit , however , that in the October circular his name had been withdrawn . Now locking at the case simply as an act of

Masonic law and cejuity , I , for one , feel that if any matter might be fairly deemed more deleterious in itself or more prejudicial to the charity , or more unfair to those many brethren who live and die in Masonry , and whose orphans cannot get into the School , this is thc case " par excellence , " as the French would say . It is the " . weakest case I have ever known , " as was well remarked

in a correspondence which appeared a short time back in thc Freemason , and I hope never to sec another like it . I quite agree with Bro . Simpson when he says so eloquently , " I siy it quietly , dispassionately , and deliberately , and I am quite sure that investigation into the different claims of candidates forms one of the first necessities of our charities being properly worked ; and secondly , that

the more we carry our charities out of the happy-go-lucky and haphazard system into the intelligent antl deserving category the better it will be . " But how does this admirable lesson of administration accord with the recent case , which was one of the most " haphazard happy-golucky " proceedings I ever heartl of , and which convinces me that committees want looking after as much as

subscribers r I am inclined to hope that Beo . Simpson said a little more than he meant in the fervour of his eloquence , and that he may on second thoughts be willing to withdraw so objectionable a word as "jobbery . " If he has no other excuse , he can make use of the one put forward by a speaker at a large dinner , in a town wilh which Bro . Simpson is well acquainted , when having made a signal blunder he excused

himself thus happily , and amid thc loud applause of the company . " Gentlemen , I am sorry for what 1 have just said , but I have lost , gentlemen , one of my front teeth , and wor s will come out , gentlemen , nolens volens . " I shall be glad to see a disclaimer in your pages from our worthy brother , the P . G . C . I am , dear Sir and Brother , yours most fraternally , AN OLD STEWARD FOR THE CHARITIES .

THE GRAND ORIENT OF FRANCE . To the Editor if Ihe " Freemason . " Dear Sir and Brother , — Thtre is , it seems , no doubt that the Grand Orient of France will be excommunicated by the Angle-Saxon Grand Lodges , and therefore the union of the Craft be dissolved . This unhappy fact is only to be regretted , not more to be hindered .

Allow me to ask or . ee more , what has the Grantl Orient of France dene in its last vote ? It has eliminated a . profession of faith from its constitutions which docs net belong to Masonic law , and which was not in thc French Constitutions before . The Grantl Orient has at present a similar law as the German Grantl Lodges . For thtre was never in any German Grand Lotlge a passusorS .

( MC ) concerning the belief in God , nor is this the case in the General Regu ' . ilitin ** , the fundamental Masonic principles adopted by the German Giand Lodge League . Never has an ) German Grand Lodge asked a candidate before he was initiated as to his belief whatever , and , nevertheless

the Grantl Lodge of England has found faith with German Masonry . A hundred ycars ago the great philosopher , J . G . Fichte , was initialed , notwithstanding he was denounced by his contemporaries as an Atheist . Bro , Fichte was a man of the highest moral worth , a

Original Correspondence.

perfect Mason , and my German brethren are proud of such a member of the Craft . Wc have at present a great number of brethren in our lodges who do not believe in a " personal " God , and are convinced that the question of a " Creator" of the world is not a religious but only a physical question , a question on the cause of casuality in general . These non-believing brethren belong to our best

and worthiest Masons , and they are loved and venerated without regard to their belief or non-belief , as in Germany the lodges only ask whether the candidate is a moral and educated man or not . We consitler the Craft as a purely moral institution , and securing freedom of conscience and profession , and acknowledge each honest and true conviction . All this has only reference to the individual brother Mason ; the lodge as such and the Craft as such

acknowledge thc Great Architect of thc Universe . If the Grand Orient of France , who has not voted against the belief in God , has committed a Masonic crime , then all continental Masonry is guilty of the same crime . No Masonic Popery can prevent continental Masons from being convinced that absolute freetlom of conscience is the true meaning of our Royal Art . Believe me , dear Brother , most fraternally yours , J . G . FINDEL .

THE ORDER OF ST . JOHN . 7 b the Editor of the " Freemason . " Dear Sir and Brother , — I observe that in your issue of the jth inst . you ask for information respecting the perpetuation and continuation of the Order of St John in England . The following is the account of the same , given bv the

existing Order of St . John of Jerusalem in Auglia , and put forth by them in their brief notice of the Order , & c , in 1874 : — "In the ) ear 1826 the five associated branches of thc Order projected the revival of the dormant Langue of England , and negociations were entered into with thc Rev . Sir Robert Peat , D . D ., G . C . S ., Chaplain to King George

IV ., and other English gentlemen , who consented to aid in the re-establishment of the Order in England , and at a chapter assembled in Paris , antl representing the great majority of five of the then existing divisions of the Order , the resuscitation of the Order in England was resolved . The Chevalier de Chastelain was tleputed to attend a meeting convened at London of Englishmen interested in the

project , when he formally revived the English Langue , and invested the Rev . Sir Rojert Peat with the functions and authority of Grand Prior of England . This is the utmost amount of authority claimed by the existing Order for their assumption of the titles of the Knights Hospitaller , whose members were the defenders of Christendom for so many years .

I should like to call the attention of your readers to a few facts respecting this last-named Order . On the 29 th November , 1797 , the Emperor Paul I . of Russia assumed the title ot Protector of the Order of Malta . On the 27 th Oct . 179 8 , the same Emperor was proclaimed Grand Master of the Order , ( the last Grand Master of the Order , who was duly elected according to the constitution of the

Order , namely , Ferdinand Von Hampesch , being still living ) . On the 6 th July , 1799 , a formal abdication of the Grand Mastership by Ferdinand Von Hampesch in favour of the Emperor Paul was made and forwarded to St . Petersburgh . On the 20 th July , 1801 , the Sacred Council of the

Sovereign Order of St . John of Jerusalem , being then assembled at St . Petersburgh , published a proclamation setting forth the mode of election of a Grand Master in the place of the Emperor Paul , then deceased . On the 27 th of June , 1802 , John de Tommasi was elected Grand Master in pursuance of the last mentioned proclamation . De Tommasi was succeeded in 1805 by Guevara

Luardo , who was followed in 1814 by Andre di Giovannj Centclleo , in 1821 by Antoine Busca , and in 1834 by Carlo de Candida . On di Canelida ' s death , Count Colloredo was elected , and in 18 5 8 he was slid Grantl Master . Thc further devolution of the office I have not been able to trace satisfactorily , but I believe it to be vested in thc Marquis de Santa Crccc , who appears to have been elected in 1872 .

The English Order of St . John , although revived in the manner I have before quoted , has never been recognised by the Sacrctl Council , nor by any of the Giand Masters before mentioned . In a publication , datctl 1841 , and emanating from the Chancery of the British Langue ( the revived Order ) , I fuul the name of M . Carlo tie Candida set down as that of the

Grand Master , ad interim . It appears from this lhat within 7 ycars from their formation , the English Langue fully recognised the then Grantl Master of the Order , as duly appointed , and that it was only on the lefusal of recognition by thc General Council that they thought of disputing their p * m * er or authority . I shoultl be the last to disparage the many good works done by thc members of the revived Order , but I share thc

objections stated by the correspondent of the time ' , whose letter you quote , to persons sailing under borrowed colours , antl I hope that Sir Edward E . A . H . Lechmerc , or some other member of the revived Order , will be able to fully prove the title of its members to the names and reputation tbat they claim as their own . Apologising for this trespass on your valuable space , I am yours fraternally , PANACHE .

[ The following is Colonel Porter ' s able letter which has frequently been referred to in the discussion . Ed . ] To the Editor if the " Times . " Sir , —May I ask your permission to add a few words to the controversy between the most noble the Marquis of Carabas , K . G ., and Sir E . Lechmerc on the subject of Pretenders . '

Original Correspondence.

It behoves those who bring forward accusations as to the wrongful assumption of titles to be very careful that they do not fall into a similar error . Our friend the Marquis states that the English branch of the Order of St . John , of which Sir E . Lechmere is the valued Secretary-General , is not recognised by the Grand Master of the Order . May I ask the Marquis who is this Grand Master ? I have for

many years made the history of the Order of St . John a favourite study , and am naw startled to discover the existence of a dignity which I had deemed extinct . Hitherto , I have been led to believe that the last Grand Master of thc Order was Ferdinand Hotnpesch , who surrendered the island of Malta to Napoleon in 1798 . Although the Emperor Paul of Russia afterwards assumed the dignity ,

his right thereto was never recognised , and after his death I have always imagined that the office fell into abeyance . Perhaps " Carabas , K . G ., " can inform me who the present holder is , and how he was elected . As regards the dispute between "Carabas , K . G ., " and Sir E . Lechmere , the real truth seems to be this—Neither the fragment of the Order resident at Rome under the

patronage of the Pope , nor that other important , but now extinct , fragment , consisting of thc three French langues , to whom our English branch owes its revival , possessed the power of exclusive jurisdiction . The English langue claims its right of affiliation through the latter , and the former is powerless to deny it . It is a very pretty quarrel , and will not be set at rest by such attacks as those of " Carabas , K . G . " The English

branch has bestirred itself to work in accordance with the intentions of the original founders , and is consequently yearly growing in influence and numbers . Let the Roman branch follow our example . They will by so doing act far better up to thc motto of the Order , " Pro utilitate hominum , " than by useless attacks upon our raison d ' etre . WHITWORTH PORTER , Colonel Royal Engineers .

To the Editor of thc " Times . " Sir , —Colonel Whitworth Porter docs me the honour to descend into the lists antl challenge my accuracy , because I usetl the term " Grand Master" in the letter you were so good as to insert in The Times . The Colonel raises thereby an entirely distinct issue from that to which I have hithertc addressed myself . Permit

me to add a few words on this subject at thc end of this letter which I hope will give the Colonel a sufficient answer to his question , " Who is this Grand Master ?" Our question is a different one—viz ., whether the asso » ciation to which the Colonel and Sir E . Lechmere and so many more honourable and excellent men belong is a legitimate branch , or a branch at all , of the historic Order

of St . John of Jerusalem , commonly called the Knights ot Malta . If Colonel Porter will turn to page 821 of the "Almanach de Gotha" ft . r the present year , 1878 , he will find , under the heading "Ordre Souvcrain de S . Jean de Jerusalem , " the style and name of our present head as follows— " Lieutenant Grand Matire , le bailli fra Ceschi a Santa Croce ( e'lu le 14 Fevrier , 1871 ) . " Then follow the

names of the Council of the Gran-Magistero—viz ., the four Grand Priors of Rome , Bohemia , the Lombard-Venetian , and the Two Sicilies , the Vice-Chancellor of the Order , & c . After the Italian Priories and tbe German Langu c follow the Associations de Chevaliers d' Honneur et Devotion—viz ., 1 . thc Rhenane—Westphalian ; 2 , the Silesian ; and 3 , the English , whose President is the Earl

Granard . The fact , then , is as I have stated—that though the asscciation calling themselves Knights of St . John maybe a philanthropic society doing much good , as I am glad to hear from Colonel Porter , it is not a recognised portion of the Order ot Malta ; in a word , it has made itself . Now to conclude with a word about my use of the

term " Grand Master . " Colonel Porter's historic researches are accurate when he tells us that Count Hompesch was our last Grand Master in the strict sense of the words , but they have led him into eiror if he supposes that the Order remained in an acephalous condition when the sovereignty of Malta was wrested from it by the French ( to be ceded by them in turn to England , in trust for the Order , be it

said en passant , by the Treaty of Amiens ) . On thc contrary , thc ofiice was , antl is still , filled by Lieutenant Grantl Masters , in regular succession , and elected by the statutable officers of thc Order . 1 he Lieutenant Grand Master , the Bailli Brother Ceschi a Santa Croce , and his council and officers , arc , therefore , distinctly not a " fragment , " as Colonel Porter says , but thc legitimate and

sole head and governing botly of the Order , exercising alone the sovereign rights still remaining to them ; such , for instance , as that cf sending a Minister-Plenipotentiary and Envoy-Extraordinary , who resides anil is received as such at the Impt rial and Royal Couit of Vienna . The reason why our Grand Master is styled " Lieutenant" is that his dignity as a Sovereign Prince , recognised by all the

crowned heads of Europe , was such that when deprived of his dominions it was felt that a Lieutenancy , or Commission as it would be called if vested in more than one , as the Lord Lieutenancy of London is held in commission , if I mistake not , was more suited to his fallen fortunes . Lit mc add but two more "last words . " Colonel Whitworth Poiter himself embodies the whole question at issue .

He signs , Colonel Royal Artillery . " I look to the " Army List" and find him in his proper place there . He and his friends say they are members of the Order of St . John . I look in our ollic ' ul list , and lo , they are not!—neither they nor their Secretary- General , nor anything that is theirs . I wish them well , I shall be most glad to

show them over our little " good work , " the stately Church and useful Hospital of St . John and St . Elizabeth in Great Ormond-street ; but I must once more , and finally , assert that it ii only in the sense in which they are Knights of St . John that I am , Sir , your obedient servant , CARABAS , K . G .

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