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  • Dec. 22, 1877
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  • " PEACE ON EARTH, GOOD WILL TO MAN."
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    Article MASONIC THOUGHTS FOR CHRISTMAS, 1877. ← Page 2 of 2
    Article " PEACE ON EARTH, GOOD WILL TO MAN." Page 1 of 1
    Article " PEACE ON EARTH, GOOD WILL TO MAN." Page 1 of 1
    Article OUR "ST. JOHN'S." Page 1 of 1
    Article OUR "ST. JOHN'S." Page 1 of 1
    Article " LE MONDE MACONNIQUE, " " THE SCOTTISH FREEMASON," AND " THE FREEMASON.' ' Page 1 of 1
Page 3

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

Masonic Thoughts For Christmas, 1877.

carried their admission . The only gainers by this senseless change are the Ultra montanes , and the old antagonist of Freemasonry , Bishop Dupanloup . For French Freemasonry such an act can only place it in the most melancholy of positions— "Isolation , " and may be , as we fear it will be . the prelude to its own internal

dissolution . Before the world it now stands in complete opposition to Cosmopolitan Freemasonry , and to its own ancient teaching , and we apprehend that there is nothing before it , humanly speakin 0- , but a reprobation of its acts , and a denial of its jurisdiction by all Anglo-Saxon Freemasons . We are sincerely sorry for the French Freemasons .

" Peace On Earth, Good Will To Man."

" PEACE ON EARTH , GOOD WILL TO MAN . "

We are closing another eventful year of the great calendar of time , and war , cruel , devastating war , is still wasting and destroying the brig ht promise of human life , and entailing its bitter and heartrending miseries upon thousands of our suffering fellow-creatures . At this time ,

then , and at this season of the year , so propitious to gentle souvenirs , and more gladdening truths , it seems well to remind ourselves of the unchanged hopes and aspirations of Freemasonry . For war qua war , Freemasonry does not possess and cannot have any sympathy . Of course

there are wars and wars . There is , for instance the war of defence , which is sacred ; there is the war of liberation , which is needful ; there is the war of honour and principle , which is commendable . But war is a sad necessity always , at the best , and can only be defended

as a necessity , and in the words of perhaps the greatest soldier who ever lived , the Duke of Wellington , we ought always to try and avoid war , if we possibly can . For war , it is too often forgotten , amid a blaze of heroic language or gaudy transparencies , the songs of

the victor , the flush of victory , is in fact a very prosaic and petty affair after all , when measured by the greater standard of humanity . We say nothing here of the line qualities it may evoke , or the noble deeds it may embalm , the heroism or daring which it displays , or the dauntless

courage which it perpetuates , for all these things are duly sang of and recounted by the bards and chroniclers of all time . And no doubt they have their good side and their true meaning for man , and life . But war , however fascinating and how gorgeous in the abstract ,

in theory , — in the concrete , practically means the overthrow of all civil life and polity , and virtue , and innocence , the ruin of peace , and of all we count most dear to us , nationally and individually , and above all the domination of all that is fell and foul , all that

is cruel and crooked , all that is unsavoury and unsatisfactory on this fair earth of ours . War is the absolute destruction of the labours of the husbandman , of the savings of the tradesman , of the progress of honest industry , of the developement of kindly commerce . We say nothing here

of the sufferings of humanity which it introduces in its train , or the outrages onlwomen , innocence , or helplessness which it entails , the ravages it occasions , the epidemics it brings about . Freemasonry cannot follow with applauding voice the car of the conqueror , which seems only to

be drawn , like hateful Juggernaut , over the prostrate bodies of the infatuated and the reckless . No orphan ' s cry , no widow ' s wail , shall go with Freemasonry , accompany its footsteps , herald its advance , or mark its ascendency . The victories it wishes to celebrate are those of

civilization ; the triumphs it is glad to record are those of peace . Under its banner are congregated those who wish to see the gradual , loyal , orderly , advance of the human race in the one safe way of patriotic legality , and , above all , in that general good , which most of all tends to the happiness of the citizen , the

contentment of nations , and satisfactory march of the great army of the human race . When , then , to-day , we still hear the blast of war , if even in a far-off land ; when wc read the tales of hideous cruelty , or have to listen to some fearful damning record of human wickedness , of the prevalence of those awful passions which war excites , as Freemasons , we cannot but express

" Peace On Earth, Good Will To Man."

a wish , at this season of the year for the advent of a golden epoch of healing peace . We look forward to the time when " Wars shall be no more , " when the " sword shall be turned into the ploughshare , " when peace shall shine upon this fair world of ours in all its radiant grace . For

that happier time we still can wait , in confiding hope , even amidst the mists and darker hours of to-day , and faith still whispers to us of a glad dawn yet to be , when in God ' s own good time , the angelic song shall yet be heard again , often forgotten amidst the discordant shouts of earthl y folly , wickedness , and warfare , " Peace on Earth , Good Will to Man . "

Our "St. John's."

OUR "ST . JOHN'S . "

Time ' s wheel , ever relentlessly running on , has rolled round , and the noted point in its periphery has again come into contact with our Masonic parallel : the weeks have sped away noiselessly and uneventfully , may be , yet gradually and surely , and here we are once more

gathered in lodge to celebrate our winter " St . John ' s . " A joyous time it is and a merry , for is it not the birth of our new Masonic year ? the starting point of many of us in a fresh career of duty and of usefulness to the Craft and Lodge , to the brethren , and , let us hope , to ourselves .

To one amongst us it is an especially anxious time—we mean to our Master , now newly enthroned in the chair of the Royal Solomon . For him the circle of this year of office will revolve concurrently with the circling-line which will bound his duty , touching on either side the

exemplary parallels to which his attention was long ago directed , and on whose pattern he must frame his future conduct ; regulated on the one side , by the eager zeal , the unflinching rectitude of the Master who gave the law amidst the terrors of Sinai and Horeb , and who enforced it in

its strictest integrity through the sad world of wilderness to the honey-yielding , milk-flowing p lains of the Canaanitish rest ; and , on the other , by the wisdom of the Grand Master , whose glory and renown were told" to earth ' s remotest bound . The new-made Master looks upon the one that

now stands beside him , a step below that chair that but lately he so well and proudly filled , and whose hand but a moment before gave into his hand the gavel of high rule and acknowledged authority ; and in this his hour of elsvation above , but by his fellows , though a proud flush

may mantle over his cheek as he thus grasps in his strong right hand the symbol of the worth y and well-earned reward of his labours , he cannot but feel that , work as he will , and labour as he may , Time ' s circle will as surely revolve for him as it has for his brother on the step below him ,

and the time must inevitably come when the point will once more touch the parallel , and he too must descend from his proud position as his brother has done before him ; and yet , he may console himself with the thought that even that lower step is , after

all , the position of dignity ; for it is the place of those who , having as lately well-ruled as they have aforetime well-wrought , are entered into that rest which is the reward of toil , and are even now in the enjoyment of the reward , the hope of which has sweetened their labour in the days gone by .

And as for these last , the Fathers of the Lodge , they in their turn will remember that a few more revolutions , at most , of Time ' s circle , and their well-earned jewels of rectitude , adorned with learning and judgment and experience , must fall from off their necks—for all mundane things , jewels though they be ,

are" Shadows , not substantial things , " which will vanish at the dawning light of morning , and will" In the earth be equal made , With the poor crooked scythe and spade . " Nor is the lesson of Time ' s circle lost to the brethren below the chair ; for them too , it

touches , year by year , its parallels and theirs , the two St . John ' s . To them it points to a ceaseless round of duty , regulated on the one hand by the burning eager zeal for truth and rectitude of the Baptist , and on the other by the meek love and trustfulness in the Master ' s care of him we speak of aB "the Divine ; " the love

Our "St. John's."

modelled on that of the one , tempering the life moulded by the warning call to the repentance , from the objects of the lower life , to those of the better life above us and beyond , of the other ; nor must they long delay , for none — " can stay Death ' s hand , Nor hold the ebbing sand ,

Of Life ' s hour-glass ; We can but brave and patient , stand ,

And let it pass . " Just as it was the case with the exemplar , in days of old , the Widow ' s son , so must it soon be with them . Happy for them if they then leave behind amongst their brethren a reflection of his bright and beautiful career of integrity , made the more resplendent by the fortitude of his faithful , albeit sorrowful , end .

Labour isended and refreshment is begun , and round the festive board are gathered the resting sons of toil ; but where are the familiar faces that we see there no more , and whose are those young forms that occupy the places of the loved and

lost ? With joy and sorrow , weal and woe , This chequered life jogs on ; and so The world keeps rolling ! While stars have set , fresh stars have shone ; New friends replace the old ones gone ,

Our grief consoling ; And marriage-bells ring on and on , Through death-knells tolling !" And so the circle is always complete , but yet though this be so , we cannot quite forget the loved and lost—lost ? no ! gone before ! For

now Time ' s circle shining out once more , although it shows us gaps here and there where earth-worn felloes have dropped out of the wheel , gaps ever widening till all , even we ourselves , shall be gone , yet tells us that the lost parts shall be reunited in the future , in the circle

of Time no longer , but of Eternity instead , an everlasting band , to be broken no more , but to circle on for ever round the throne of The Great Architect of the Universe , Himself the centra of the system of love , taught us in this out greatest festal-day , our annual " St . John ' s . "

" Le Monde Maconnique, " " The Scottish Freemason," And " The Freemason.' '

" LE MONDE MACONNIQUE , " " THE SCOTTISH FREEMASON , " AND " THE FREEMASON . ' '

It is a great pity , that those worthy brethren who write in the Monde Maconnique are so ill posted up in all that relates to the Free ? nason . It is not indeed surprising that thus it should be , but we think it well to state , for the information of our readers , that thus it is . Having recently hinted that certain editorial articles of the

Freemason are animated by the views of a trader , and thus assuming that the Editor and Publisher of the Freemason are one and the same , in order to point a childish sarcasm , they have made another amusing mistake in the last number of the Monde Maconnique ; for now they gravely

assert that the Editor of the Freemason and of the Scottish Freemason is the same person , and like the French Republic , '' one and indivisible . " But , as we before pointed out , Bro . Kenning , though the sole proprietor , is not the Editor of the Freemason , who has a distinct

personality , however humble , of his own . And so also we think it well to remark to-day , that the editor of the Freemason is not the editor of the Scottish Freemason , has nothing to do with its direction , and knows nothing of its articles , and in no sense directs its opinions . The Scottish

Freemason is a perfectly independent paper of itsself , and unconnected with the Freemason . Though Bro . Kenning is the proprietoi and publisher of both , the Scottish Freemason has been , and is so ably edited , that we feel the compliment of the Monde Maconnique very much , and as we

fully agree with the actual editor of the Scottish Freemason in all that he has said , and in all that he does say week by week so effectively , we are very happy to be supposed to " row in the S 3 me boat " with him . What a pity it is that

our old antagonist Bro . Adrien Grimaux should make such a "leetle bifsteak , " and like the "charming woman" of the old song should " talk of things " which he certainly does not " understand . "

ETON COLLEGE . —The school will close next Friday for the Christmas vacation , when the authorities of the Great Western and South Western Railways will run special trains for the conveyance of the boys to their homes .

“The Freemason: 1877-12-22, Page 3” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 5 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fvl/issues/fvl_22121877/page/3/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
TO OUR READERS. Article 1
Untitled Article 1
Answers to Correspondents. Article 1
Births , Marriages and Deaths. Article 1
CONTENTS. Article 1
Untitled Article 1
A CHRISTMAS GREETING. Article 1
THE PROGRESS OF TIME. Article 1
CHRISTMAS. Article 2
MASONIC THOUGHTS FOR CHRISTMAS, 1877. Article 2
" PEACE ON EARTH, GOOD WILL TO MAN." Article 3
OUR "ST. JOHN'S." Article 3
" LE MONDE MACONNIQUE, " " THE SCOTTISH FREEMASON," AND " THE FREEMASON.' ' Article 3
THE INSTALLATION ENGRAVING. Article 4
COMMUNIQUE. Article 4
Original Correspondence. Article 4
LODGE OF BENEVOLENCE. Article 4
Original Correspondence. Article 4
THE UNIVERSALITY OF MASONRY AND THE BELIEF IN GOD. Article 5
THE MASONIC HALL IN DUBLIN. Article 5
TOLERANCE OF MASONRY. Article 6
KNIGHT TEMPLAR NOTES. Article 7
ADDRESS DELIVERED AT THE DEDICATION OF ROGER "WILLIAMS' MONUMENT, U.S. Article 7
TRUTH REGNANT. Article 8
LOOK TO THE FUTURE. Article 8
THE FRUITS OF FREEMASONRY. Article 8
THE LODGE. Article 9
NON-READING MASONS. Article 9
A LODGE OF SORROW IN AMERICA. Article 9
GRAND ORIENT OF FRANCE. Article 10
R.W. BRO. D. MURRAY LYON, GRAND SECRETARY OF THE GRAND LODGE OF SCOTLAND. Article 10
Poetry. Article 10
THE ANGEL OF MERCY. Article 10
THE MASON'S JEWELS. Article 10
THE CHRISTMAS TREE. Article 10
Reviews. Article 11
A CHANGE OF SUITS. Article 11
AN ACCOMMODATING WITNESS. Article 11
WHAT HAPPENED AT A CHRISTMAS GATHERING. Article 12
VATICANISM IN A NEW ROLE. Article 13
GRAND LODGE OF PENNSYLVANIA. Article 13
GOOD THOUGHTS. Article 14
PARIS EXHIBITION OF 1878. Article 14
PRIVATE INQUIRIES. Article 14
MASONRY. Article 14
LIVING STILL. Article 14
NOTES ON ART, &c. Article 15
THE GRAND ORIENT OF FRANCE. Article 15
TECHNICAL EDUCATION IN THE MINING SCHOOL. Article 15
" PASS-WORDS FOR THE CRAFT." Article 15
PROVINCIAL GRAND LODGE OF NORTH WALES AND SHROPSHIRE . Article 16
REPORTS OF MASONIC MEETINGS. Article 16
Royal Arch. Article 20
Red Cross of Constantine. Article 21
CONCERNING FREEMASONRY AND ITS SECRETS. Article 21
THE ORDER OF THE TEMPLE. Article 22
WHAT IS CHIVALRY? Article 22
HANNAH IRWIN ISRAEL. Article 22
A "GENTLEMAN MASON." Article 22
MASONIC DIARY FOR 1878. Article 22
Masonic and General Tidings. Article 23
METROPOLITAN MASONIC MEETINGS, Article 24
Untitled Ad 24
Untitled Ad 24
Untitled Ad 24
Untitled Ad 24
Untitled Ad 24
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Masonic Thoughts For Christmas, 1877.

carried their admission . The only gainers by this senseless change are the Ultra montanes , and the old antagonist of Freemasonry , Bishop Dupanloup . For French Freemasonry such an act can only place it in the most melancholy of positions— "Isolation , " and may be , as we fear it will be . the prelude to its own internal

dissolution . Before the world it now stands in complete opposition to Cosmopolitan Freemasonry , and to its own ancient teaching , and we apprehend that there is nothing before it , humanly speakin 0- , but a reprobation of its acts , and a denial of its jurisdiction by all Anglo-Saxon Freemasons . We are sincerely sorry for the French Freemasons .

" Peace On Earth, Good Will To Man."

" PEACE ON EARTH , GOOD WILL TO MAN . "

We are closing another eventful year of the great calendar of time , and war , cruel , devastating war , is still wasting and destroying the brig ht promise of human life , and entailing its bitter and heartrending miseries upon thousands of our suffering fellow-creatures . At this time ,

then , and at this season of the year , so propitious to gentle souvenirs , and more gladdening truths , it seems well to remind ourselves of the unchanged hopes and aspirations of Freemasonry . For war qua war , Freemasonry does not possess and cannot have any sympathy . Of course

there are wars and wars . There is , for instance the war of defence , which is sacred ; there is the war of liberation , which is needful ; there is the war of honour and principle , which is commendable . But war is a sad necessity always , at the best , and can only be defended

as a necessity , and in the words of perhaps the greatest soldier who ever lived , the Duke of Wellington , we ought always to try and avoid war , if we possibly can . For war , it is too often forgotten , amid a blaze of heroic language or gaudy transparencies , the songs of

the victor , the flush of victory , is in fact a very prosaic and petty affair after all , when measured by the greater standard of humanity . We say nothing here of the line qualities it may evoke , or the noble deeds it may embalm , the heroism or daring which it displays , or the dauntless

courage which it perpetuates , for all these things are duly sang of and recounted by the bards and chroniclers of all time . And no doubt they have their good side and their true meaning for man , and life . But war , however fascinating and how gorgeous in the abstract ,

in theory , — in the concrete , practically means the overthrow of all civil life and polity , and virtue , and innocence , the ruin of peace , and of all we count most dear to us , nationally and individually , and above all the domination of all that is fell and foul , all that

is cruel and crooked , all that is unsavoury and unsatisfactory on this fair earth of ours . War is the absolute destruction of the labours of the husbandman , of the savings of the tradesman , of the progress of honest industry , of the developement of kindly commerce . We say nothing here

of the sufferings of humanity which it introduces in its train , or the outrages onlwomen , innocence , or helplessness which it entails , the ravages it occasions , the epidemics it brings about . Freemasonry cannot follow with applauding voice the car of the conqueror , which seems only to

be drawn , like hateful Juggernaut , over the prostrate bodies of the infatuated and the reckless . No orphan ' s cry , no widow ' s wail , shall go with Freemasonry , accompany its footsteps , herald its advance , or mark its ascendency . The victories it wishes to celebrate are those of

civilization ; the triumphs it is glad to record are those of peace . Under its banner are congregated those who wish to see the gradual , loyal , orderly , advance of the human race in the one safe way of patriotic legality , and , above all , in that general good , which most of all tends to the happiness of the citizen , the

contentment of nations , and satisfactory march of the great army of the human race . When , then , to-day , we still hear the blast of war , if even in a far-off land ; when wc read the tales of hideous cruelty , or have to listen to some fearful damning record of human wickedness , of the prevalence of those awful passions which war excites , as Freemasons , we cannot but express

" Peace On Earth, Good Will To Man."

a wish , at this season of the year for the advent of a golden epoch of healing peace . We look forward to the time when " Wars shall be no more , " when the " sword shall be turned into the ploughshare , " when peace shall shine upon this fair world of ours in all its radiant grace . For

that happier time we still can wait , in confiding hope , even amidst the mists and darker hours of to-day , and faith still whispers to us of a glad dawn yet to be , when in God ' s own good time , the angelic song shall yet be heard again , often forgotten amidst the discordant shouts of earthl y folly , wickedness , and warfare , " Peace on Earth , Good Will to Man . "

Our "St. John's."

OUR "ST . JOHN'S . "

Time ' s wheel , ever relentlessly running on , has rolled round , and the noted point in its periphery has again come into contact with our Masonic parallel : the weeks have sped away noiselessly and uneventfully , may be , yet gradually and surely , and here we are once more

gathered in lodge to celebrate our winter " St . John ' s . " A joyous time it is and a merry , for is it not the birth of our new Masonic year ? the starting point of many of us in a fresh career of duty and of usefulness to the Craft and Lodge , to the brethren , and , let us hope , to ourselves .

To one amongst us it is an especially anxious time—we mean to our Master , now newly enthroned in the chair of the Royal Solomon . For him the circle of this year of office will revolve concurrently with the circling-line which will bound his duty , touching on either side the

exemplary parallels to which his attention was long ago directed , and on whose pattern he must frame his future conduct ; regulated on the one side , by the eager zeal , the unflinching rectitude of the Master who gave the law amidst the terrors of Sinai and Horeb , and who enforced it in

its strictest integrity through the sad world of wilderness to the honey-yielding , milk-flowing p lains of the Canaanitish rest ; and , on the other , by the wisdom of the Grand Master , whose glory and renown were told" to earth ' s remotest bound . The new-made Master looks upon the one that

now stands beside him , a step below that chair that but lately he so well and proudly filled , and whose hand but a moment before gave into his hand the gavel of high rule and acknowledged authority ; and in this his hour of elsvation above , but by his fellows , though a proud flush

may mantle over his cheek as he thus grasps in his strong right hand the symbol of the worth y and well-earned reward of his labours , he cannot but feel that , work as he will , and labour as he may , Time ' s circle will as surely revolve for him as it has for his brother on the step below him ,

and the time must inevitably come when the point will once more touch the parallel , and he too must descend from his proud position as his brother has done before him ; and yet , he may console himself with the thought that even that lower step is , after

all , the position of dignity ; for it is the place of those who , having as lately well-ruled as they have aforetime well-wrought , are entered into that rest which is the reward of toil , and are even now in the enjoyment of the reward , the hope of which has sweetened their labour in the days gone by .

And as for these last , the Fathers of the Lodge , they in their turn will remember that a few more revolutions , at most , of Time ' s circle , and their well-earned jewels of rectitude , adorned with learning and judgment and experience , must fall from off their necks—for all mundane things , jewels though they be ,

are" Shadows , not substantial things , " which will vanish at the dawning light of morning , and will" In the earth be equal made , With the poor crooked scythe and spade . " Nor is the lesson of Time ' s circle lost to the brethren below the chair ; for them too , it

touches , year by year , its parallels and theirs , the two St . John ' s . To them it points to a ceaseless round of duty , regulated on the one hand by the burning eager zeal for truth and rectitude of the Baptist , and on the other by the meek love and trustfulness in the Master ' s care of him we speak of aB "the Divine ; " the love

Our "St. John's."

modelled on that of the one , tempering the life moulded by the warning call to the repentance , from the objects of the lower life , to those of the better life above us and beyond , of the other ; nor must they long delay , for none — " can stay Death ' s hand , Nor hold the ebbing sand ,

Of Life ' s hour-glass ; We can but brave and patient , stand ,

And let it pass . " Just as it was the case with the exemplar , in days of old , the Widow ' s son , so must it soon be with them . Happy for them if they then leave behind amongst their brethren a reflection of his bright and beautiful career of integrity , made the more resplendent by the fortitude of his faithful , albeit sorrowful , end .

Labour isended and refreshment is begun , and round the festive board are gathered the resting sons of toil ; but where are the familiar faces that we see there no more , and whose are those young forms that occupy the places of the loved and

lost ? With joy and sorrow , weal and woe , This chequered life jogs on ; and so The world keeps rolling ! While stars have set , fresh stars have shone ; New friends replace the old ones gone ,

Our grief consoling ; And marriage-bells ring on and on , Through death-knells tolling !" And so the circle is always complete , but yet though this be so , we cannot quite forget the loved and lost—lost ? no ! gone before ! For

now Time ' s circle shining out once more , although it shows us gaps here and there where earth-worn felloes have dropped out of the wheel , gaps ever widening till all , even we ourselves , shall be gone , yet tells us that the lost parts shall be reunited in the future , in the circle

of Time no longer , but of Eternity instead , an everlasting band , to be broken no more , but to circle on for ever round the throne of The Great Architect of the Universe , Himself the centra of the system of love , taught us in this out greatest festal-day , our annual " St . John ' s . "

" Le Monde Maconnique, " " The Scottish Freemason," And " The Freemason.' '

" LE MONDE MACONNIQUE , " " THE SCOTTISH FREEMASON , " AND " THE FREEMASON . ' '

It is a great pity , that those worthy brethren who write in the Monde Maconnique are so ill posted up in all that relates to the Free ? nason . It is not indeed surprising that thus it should be , but we think it well to state , for the information of our readers , that thus it is . Having recently hinted that certain editorial articles of the

Freemason are animated by the views of a trader , and thus assuming that the Editor and Publisher of the Freemason are one and the same , in order to point a childish sarcasm , they have made another amusing mistake in the last number of the Monde Maconnique ; for now they gravely

assert that the Editor of the Freemason and of the Scottish Freemason is the same person , and like the French Republic , '' one and indivisible . " But , as we before pointed out , Bro . Kenning , though the sole proprietor , is not the Editor of the Freemason , who has a distinct

personality , however humble , of his own . And so also we think it well to remark to-day , that the editor of the Freemason is not the editor of the Scottish Freemason , has nothing to do with its direction , and knows nothing of its articles , and in no sense directs its opinions . The Scottish

Freemason is a perfectly independent paper of itsself , and unconnected with the Freemason . Though Bro . Kenning is the proprietoi and publisher of both , the Scottish Freemason has been , and is so ably edited , that we feel the compliment of the Monde Maconnique very much , and as we

fully agree with the actual editor of the Scottish Freemason in all that he has said , and in all that he does say week by week so effectively , we are very happy to be supposed to " row in the S 3 me boat " with him . What a pity it is that

our old antagonist Bro . Adrien Grimaux should make such a "leetle bifsteak , " and like the "charming woman" of the old song should " talk of things " which he certainly does not " understand . "

ETON COLLEGE . —The school will close next Friday for the Christmas vacation , when the authorities of the Great Western and South Western Railways will run special trains for the conveyance of the boys to their homes .

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