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  • The Freemason
  • Nov. 25, 1876
  • Page 9
  • Original Correspondence.
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The Freemason, Nov. 25, 1876: Page 9

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    Article WHO IS THE PARTY ? ← Page 2 of 2
    Article THE MODERN LADY FREEMASON. Page 1 of 1
    Article THE MODERN LADY FREEMASON. Page 1 of 1
    Article Original Correspondence. Page 1 of 1
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Page 9

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

Who Is The Party ?

" Synagogues of Satan . " The Roman Pontiff and the Roman Curia , and Ultramontane writers clearly place us in the category of Indian "Devil worshippers . '' Now we feel it rig ht at once , though the statement be most ludicrous and contemptible , to say that any such assertion is a

direct and wilful falsehood . We ask the " Unita Cattolica" or Mr . " De Camille " for the name of this most unmasonic orator , though we can saft-ly assure all our readers beforehand that no s ' . ich words were ever spoken in Freemasons' Hall , and least of all by an English

Freemason , even though his name were " Walker . " It is a ? reat pity when an otherwise respectable paper like the " Unita Cattolica " descends to wholesale lying , and we almost wonder that Roman Catholics themselves do

not perceive the evil and degradation which such deliberate and childish fictions bring upon their entire communion . But alas , just now the love of pseudo-miracles and unreliable legends seems to have taken from the realization of the

" abstract importance of truth . ' We ask again who is the English Freemason who then gave utterance to such accents of blasphemous folly r and , like the Irish Echo , we reply , " No one . " He exists only in the imagination of some ardent but unscrupulous Ultramontane . No one

in his senses , much less a Freemason , coulu have said anything so horribly impious , and so grotesquely absurd , and we fear that it must be credited not to Freemasons' Hall or an English Freemason , but to the "Jesuit College , " or some other house of assembly for saintly libellers and

infidel reli g ionists . If the old adage be true , " Noscitur a sociis , " as we hear so much of the < c gentleman in black " from Ultramontanes , all we can say is , we wish them joy of the good company into which just now they seem to have fallen .

The Modern Lady Freemason.

THE MODERN LADY FREEMASON .

Our American contemporary , the " Masonic Journal , " of Greensboro , North Carolina , U . S ., in its issue of October 24 , reprints an article of ours on the initiation of Countess Hadick , and then proceeds to take us to task for our opinion "thereanenl , " in a very kindly and genial way . We

cannot do less than return the compliment , and reprint , which we do elsewhere , our contemporary ' s " deliverance " on the subject , We confess that we see no reason to modify any of the opinions we have previously expressed on the subject ; neither are we convinced , we feel bound to

say , by any of the arguments of our good confrere . The whole point , as we apprehend it , lies in this—can the Grand Orient of Hungary , without some express provision in its laws to that effect , declare an act of initiation performed in open lodge , after the due formalities and conditions

prescribed by customary procedure " ab initio , " null and void ? We feel quite convinced that such a step is " ultra vires " on the part of the Grand Orient of Hungary , and we will add there is no precedent for such an assumption of autocratic power , either in England or the United

States , in the history of our common Order . The able writer in the "Masonic Journal " does not appear to us to note the grave and essential difference as between punishing an illegality , and declaring an act to be " null and void . " We all agree that the initiation " per se " was illegal , as

the rules of the Order regard men , not women ; and we must all agree that the Grand Orient of Hungary would have been perfectly justified in suspending the W . M . and officers , and all assisting and abetting brethren , and closing the

lod ge " pro tern . " But can the Gr . ind Orient of Hungary , or any other Grand Lodge , declare an initiation " 111111 and void " which was duly performed in open lodge ? We doubt it very much indeed . How does such power accrue , and if existent , what is its effect ? It is sometimes

necessary to declare a ceremony invalid and informal , and to require it to be repeated according to our " lex scripta , " but we know of no case in Which any Grand Lodge has ever assumed to

"Self the authority to declare such a "fait accompli" null and void . " It may declare it to be irregular , and highly reprehensible , it may censure the lod ge and the W . M ., it may inflict the Penalty of a fine or of suspension , but can it affect

The Modern Lady Freemason.

the act itself ? Again we say , we think not . What the real position of this principal actress amidst these peculiar Masonic "dramatis personae " may be is to our apprehension one of the great difficulties of the case . As we view it , however formally initiated , until Countess Hadick receives

her certificate she cannot by our national and international Masonic law enter a lodge . Therefore if the Grand Orient of Hungary persists in its refusal to admit of her initiation under any circumstances , and if the Grand Orient is supreme in all such matters , she cannot in Hungary nor ,

we apprehend , in Anglo-Saxon Freemasonry , be received or hailed as a sister legally . If indeed under some other constitution she can be received as a joining member of some lodge , then the fact of such "healing" will become another and special question for consideration . A good

deal will also turn upon the laws and customs of the Hungarian Freemasons . Is it necessary to have a Grand Lodge certificate r or will the lodge certificate suffice ? and can lodges still grant certificates ? All these are matters which crop "Tip , and have to be dealt with , before we

can fully adjudicate even on the question of reception . For if she can produce a lodge certificate , and such is valid in Hungary by law and custom , it will be valid elsewhere ; and if she produces a Masonic certificate through her affiliation to another lodge in another

constitution , we apprehend that it would not be necessary to go into the original question of the legality or illegality of her initiation . But assuming that insuperable difficulties be in the way of her recognition or reception , is it not the best solution of the dilemma

to make Countess Hiidick ' s reception a special case ? We think it is ; our contemporary as decidedly thinks not , and believes " it will never do . " We would respectfully ask our friendly critic—why ? Does not the very exception prove the rule ? Is it not

clear that by the Grand Orient of Hungary condoning the past and making a special ease of this little incident it puts a stop to any tendency to illegal proceedings , and by no means licences , as our contemporary appears to fear , a repetition of similar acts . So far from

establishing a precedent , the Grand Orient of Hungary discountenances , distinctly , any similar attempts , but in the interests of peace and conciliation it " heals" the illegal reception , and simply follows out the old adage , " Fieri non debet , factum valet . " In this age of reasonable

compromises it seems to us absurd always to be claiming the " uti possidetis , " or crying out in lachrymose vocubulary , " non possumus , " and it is according to our notions both more rational and above all , more Masonic , to take a large and liberal view of questions , whether " burning" or

otherwise , which are so sure to come to the surface , and with which we have to deal . Such questions , we feel it right to add , we are of opinion should be dealt with , not with the fiat of an inexorable and unaccommodating Draconism , but with the genial sympathy of that kindly old Order of ours , which would always

act more in the spirit than the letter , and would always seek to accompany the sterner requirements of law with the softening and soothing attributes of an enlightened and liberal accommodation to tlm feelings of our brethren , the necessities of the case , the temper of the times , and the welfare of the Craft .

Original Correspondence.

Original Correspondence .

[ We do not hold ourselves responsible for , or even a * approvirg of ihd opinions expressed by our correspondents , but we wish , in a spirit of fair play lo all , to permit—wimin curtain iiecc-wary limits—free discussion . ~ -liD . ]

GRAND LODGE OF ENGLAND , AND GRAND LODGE OF SCOTLAND—A CONTRAST . To the Editor of the Freemason . Dear Sir and Brother , — While the Wardens of thc Grand Lodge of England are deliberating how they shall spend a few thousands of

their surplus funds in commemoration of the safe return from India of their respected M . W . Grand Master , the Prince of Wales , the Grand Lodge of Scotland is sunk over head and ears in debt . This deplorable state of things docs not arise from thc niggardliness of Scotch Freemasons , or their want of loyalty to Grand Lodge which was especially proved at Glasgow a few weeks ago ,

Original Correspondence.

but wholly and solely from the mismanagement of Grand Lodge officials and Grand Committee . You will scarcely believe it , but it is nevertheless true , which I vouch for as a member of Grand Lodge , that we have not received a single report or balance sheet of financial matters ( nor cannot get ) either from Grand Secretary , Grand Treasurer , Finance Committee , or Grand Committee , since the

beginning of 18 73 , and now we are close upon the beginning of 1877 . Such a disgraceful state of matters would not be allowed to exist for a single year out of the Grand Lodge of Scotland . And what is the result of this disgraceful mismanagement of Grand Committee ? It is tnis , that while in England with a Grand Lodge Roll of 16 31 lodges , there is scarcely a dormant Lodge , while in

Scotland with a Grand Lodge roll of 575 , they have lodges dormant by the score , as can be seen by the Scottish Masonic Calendar for 1876 . This state of matters arises entirely from the want of attention by Grand Lodge and Provincial Grand Lodge , many lodges not being visited for eight or ten years , and 1 : 0 more attention paid to them than if they lived in the moon ; so much is this the case

that it has become a common saying among the lodges , that Grand Lodge only wants the cash , and rather than continue in such a state , lodges quietly drop out of existence , or in other words dormant . Not long ago a proposition was made to start a new Grand Lodge in Glasgow in opposition to the Grand Lodge in Edinburgh , while others propose the total

stopping of the supplies to bring Grand Lodge to a total stand-still . These little matters show how the wind blows and the great need there is for improvement . The Earl of Rosslyn while on the throne did his best to improve matters , but his efforts have not been followed up by Grand Committee , and things are going from bad to worse . Everything aiid everybody beyond Grand

Committee are kept in a state of total darkness , and , as may be supposed , the most ugly rumours are flying about from lodge to lodge of what the end will be , and the common belief is that tlie end will be disastrous to Grand Lodge . The Grand Lodge ought to bs the very essence of all that is pure , honourable and business-like , as

an example to the daughter lodges . Instead of that , after sixteen years' experience , I can only pronounce it a place of hollowness and rottenness , in fact a huge sham . If we send money we may get a receipt , after shewing a determination to have it . If we write upon Masonic business we may get an answer to one letter in four . The M . W . G . Master says he is aware that

thc Grand Secretary s office is in a bad state , but he will endeavour to improve it . The M . W . Grand Master has known the same for two years , and things are there growing worse , which is something like proof that it is past redemption . It would be a good thing if the M . W . G . Master would look into the Treasurer's accounts as well . Sir , I hope that you will give this a place in your next

impression . I grieve to oe compelled to wiite this , but all parties have had so many warnings to put their houses in order , that advice is no more heeded than the blowing of the wind . Silence would longer be a crime , and before that noble institution of the Craft , the most noble that ever was devised by man , lies crumbling in the dust

I , for one , will raise my voice against the mismanagement that is bringing our Grand Lodge to ruin . Should time and space permit I may have something more to say on the subject . 1 am , yours fraternally , ADAM THOMSON , S . P . G . M . Peebles and Selkirkshire , and Proxy Master for , and R . W . M . of St . John ' s Lodge , Galashiels .

THE HERVEY LODGE . To the Editor of the Freemason . Dear Sir and Brother , — I regret to find myself once more called upon to address you on the proceedings taken against a defaulting brother of my lodge . You will forgive me for saying that your editorial

remarks on the question scarcely seem to me to be either conceived or written in that spirit of " brotherly love " which you in your opening remarks enjoin upon us ; on the contrary , they partake largely of " the abuse of the ignorant " rightly condemned . Writing of the Hervey Lodge you say , " The various blunders made by that distinguished lodge are too

numerous to mention here . " Now this , I need scarcely remind you , is a seriously damaging charge . As Master of the Hervey Lodge , 1 beg to i-tate , that it is a most unfair and untruthful st itemenr , and appeirs to me must have been made with the view of prejudicing our case should it come , as you intimate , " under the notice of the Board of General Purposes . "

I may say that any complaint you , or any member of the Craft , may have to allege against my lodge will be met without hesitation , and 1 trust that I shall be able to give a satisfactory explanation of our proceedings before any legally constituted tribunal . But-I cannot be expected to meet sweeping and general assertions such as you make , and I protest iiicommuu fairness and justice against

wholesale insinuations . You further say , " that ev ; ry step the lodge has taken is constitutionally wrong an 1 illegal . " This is a bare assertion , and an attempt to support a foregone conclusion , without knowing anything of the merits ot the case . The paragraph raises a question in my mind , and which you

will forgive mc for saying , it is quite incompetent for you to decide ; at all events , it is you rather than the Hervey Lodge who have " made the subject" one " of public conversation or Masonic scandal . " I am , Sir and Brother , yours fraternally , G . HARRISON , Nov . 14 , 18 : 6 . W . M 12 O 0 ,

“The Freemason: 1876-11-25, Page 9” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 29 March 2023, masonicperiodicals.org/periodicals/fvl/issues/fvl_25111876/page/9/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
CONTENTS. Article 1
REPORTS OF MASONIC MEETINGS. Article 1
Mark Masonry. Article 3
PROVINCIAL GRAND LODGE OF DERBYSHIRE. Article 3
LODGE OF BENEVOLENCE. Article 3
ILLEGALITY. Article 3
ROYAL MASONIC INSTITUTION FOR GIRLS. Article 4
PRINCE LEOPOLD AND THE WILTSHIRE FREEMASONS. Article 5
Masonic and General Tidings. Article 5
CONSECRATION OF THE CRICHTON LODGE, No. 1646. Article 5
IMPORTANT NOTICE. Article 8
TO OUR READERS. Article 8
Untitled Ad 8
Answers to Correspondents. Article 8
Births, Marriages, and Deaths. Article 8
Untitled Article 8
THE INSTALLATION OF THE P.G.M. FOR NORFOLK. Article 8
THE HERVEY LODGE Article 8
WHO IS THE PARTY ? Article 8
THE MODERN LADY FREEMASON. Article 9
Original Correspondence. Article 9
TOLERATION AND FATHER FOY. Article 10
THE DEPUTY PROVINCIAL GRAND MASTER OF SUFFOLK Article 10
THE PROVINCE OF NORFOLK. Article 10
Scotland. Article 12
FREEMASONRY IN TURKEY. Article 12
FREEMASONRY IN THE UNITED STATES. 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
Untitled Ad 14
Untitled Ad 14
Untitled Ad 14
Untitled Ad 14
Untitled Ad 14
Untitled Ad 14
Untitled Ad 14
Untitled Ad 14
Untitled Ad 14
Untitled Ad 14
Untitled Ad 14
Untitled Ad 14
Untitled Ad 14
Untitled Ad 14
Untitled Ad 14
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Who Is The Party ?

" Synagogues of Satan . " The Roman Pontiff and the Roman Curia , and Ultramontane writers clearly place us in the category of Indian "Devil worshippers . '' Now we feel it rig ht at once , though the statement be most ludicrous and contemptible , to say that any such assertion is a

direct and wilful falsehood . We ask the " Unita Cattolica" or Mr . " De Camille " for the name of this most unmasonic orator , though we can saft-ly assure all our readers beforehand that no s ' . ich words were ever spoken in Freemasons' Hall , and least of all by an English

Freemason , even though his name were " Walker . " It is a ? reat pity when an otherwise respectable paper like the " Unita Cattolica " descends to wholesale lying , and we almost wonder that Roman Catholics themselves do

not perceive the evil and degradation which such deliberate and childish fictions bring upon their entire communion . But alas , just now the love of pseudo-miracles and unreliable legends seems to have taken from the realization of the

" abstract importance of truth . ' We ask again who is the English Freemason who then gave utterance to such accents of blasphemous folly r and , like the Irish Echo , we reply , " No one . " He exists only in the imagination of some ardent but unscrupulous Ultramontane . No one

in his senses , much less a Freemason , coulu have said anything so horribly impious , and so grotesquely absurd , and we fear that it must be credited not to Freemasons' Hall or an English Freemason , but to the "Jesuit College , " or some other house of assembly for saintly libellers and

infidel reli g ionists . If the old adage be true , " Noscitur a sociis , " as we hear so much of the < c gentleman in black " from Ultramontanes , all we can say is , we wish them joy of the good company into which just now they seem to have fallen .

The Modern Lady Freemason.

THE MODERN LADY FREEMASON .

Our American contemporary , the " Masonic Journal , " of Greensboro , North Carolina , U . S ., in its issue of October 24 , reprints an article of ours on the initiation of Countess Hadick , and then proceeds to take us to task for our opinion "thereanenl , " in a very kindly and genial way . We

cannot do less than return the compliment , and reprint , which we do elsewhere , our contemporary ' s " deliverance " on the subject , We confess that we see no reason to modify any of the opinions we have previously expressed on the subject ; neither are we convinced , we feel bound to

say , by any of the arguments of our good confrere . The whole point , as we apprehend it , lies in this—can the Grand Orient of Hungary , without some express provision in its laws to that effect , declare an act of initiation performed in open lodge , after the due formalities and conditions

prescribed by customary procedure " ab initio , " null and void ? We feel quite convinced that such a step is " ultra vires " on the part of the Grand Orient of Hungary , and we will add there is no precedent for such an assumption of autocratic power , either in England or the United

States , in the history of our common Order . The able writer in the "Masonic Journal " does not appear to us to note the grave and essential difference as between punishing an illegality , and declaring an act to be " null and void . " We all agree that the initiation " per se " was illegal , as

the rules of the Order regard men , not women ; and we must all agree that the Grand Orient of Hungary would have been perfectly justified in suspending the W . M . and officers , and all assisting and abetting brethren , and closing the

lod ge " pro tern . " But can the Gr . ind Orient of Hungary , or any other Grand Lodge , declare an initiation " 111111 and void " which was duly performed in open lodge ? We doubt it very much indeed . How does such power accrue , and if existent , what is its effect ? It is sometimes

necessary to declare a ceremony invalid and informal , and to require it to be repeated according to our " lex scripta , " but we know of no case in Which any Grand Lodge has ever assumed to

"Self the authority to declare such a "fait accompli" null and void . " It may declare it to be irregular , and highly reprehensible , it may censure the lod ge and the W . M ., it may inflict the Penalty of a fine or of suspension , but can it affect

The Modern Lady Freemason.

the act itself ? Again we say , we think not . What the real position of this principal actress amidst these peculiar Masonic "dramatis personae " may be is to our apprehension one of the great difficulties of the case . As we view it , however formally initiated , until Countess Hadick receives

her certificate she cannot by our national and international Masonic law enter a lodge . Therefore if the Grand Orient of Hungary persists in its refusal to admit of her initiation under any circumstances , and if the Grand Orient is supreme in all such matters , she cannot in Hungary nor ,

we apprehend , in Anglo-Saxon Freemasonry , be received or hailed as a sister legally . If indeed under some other constitution she can be received as a joining member of some lodge , then the fact of such "healing" will become another and special question for consideration . A good

deal will also turn upon the laws and customs of the Hungarian Freemasons . Is it necessary to have a Grand Lodge certificate r or will the lodge certificate suffice ? and can lodges still grant certificates ? All these are matters which crop "Tip , and have to be dealt with , before we

can fully adjudicate even on the question of reception . For if she can produce a lodge certificate , and such is valid in Hungary by law and custom , it will be valid elsewhere ; and if she produces a Masonic certificate through her affiliation to another lodge in another

constitution , we apprehend that it would not be necessary to go into the original question of the legality or illegality of her initiation . But assuming that insuperable difficulties be in the way of her recognition or reception , is it not the best solution of the dilemma

to make Countess Hiidick ' s reception a special case ? We think it is ; our contemporary as decidedly thinks not , and believes " it will never do . " We would respectfully ask our friendly critic—why ? Does not the very exception prove the rule ? Is it not

clear that by the Grand Orient of Hungary condoning the past and making a special ease of this little incident it puts a stop to any tendency to illegal proceedings , and by no means licences , as our contemporary appears to fear , a repetition of similar acts . So far from

establishing a precedent , the Grand Orient of Hungary discountenances , distinctly , any similar attempts , but in the interests of peace and conciliation it " heals" the illegal reception , and simply follows out the old adage , " Fieri non debet , factum valet . " In this age of reasonable

compromises it seems to us absurd always to be claiming the " uti possidetis , " or crying out in lachrymose vocubulary , " non possumus , " and it is according to our notions both more rational and above all , more Masonic , to take a large and liberal view of questions , whether " burning" or

otherwise , which are so sure to come to the surface , and with which we have to deal . Such questions , we feel it right to add , we are of opinion should be dealt with , not with the fiat of an inexorable and unaccommodating Draconism , but with the genial sympathy of that kindly old Order of ours , which would always

act more in the spirit than the letter , and would always seek to accompany the sterner requirements of law with the softening and soothing attributes of an enlightened and liberal accommodation to tlm feelings of our brethren , the necessities of the case , the temper of the times , and the welfare of the Craft .

Original Correspondence.

Original Correspondence .

[ We do not hold ourselves responsible for , or even a * approvirg of ihd opinions expressed by our correspondents , but we wish , in a spirit of fair play lo all , to permit—wimin curtain iiecc-wary limits—free discussion . ~ -liD . ]

GRAND LODGE OF ENGLAND , AND GRAND LODGE OF SCOTLAND—A CONTRAST . To the Editor of the Freemason . Dear Sir and Brother , — While the Wardens of thc Grand Lodge of England are deliberating how they shall spend a few thousands of

their surplus funds in commemoration of the safe return from India of their respected M . W . Grand Master , the Prince of Wales , the Grand Lodge of Scotland is sunk over head and ears in debt . This deplorable state of things docs not arise from thc niggardliness of Scotch Freemasons , or their want of loyalty to Grand Lodge which was especially proved at Glasgow a few weeks ago ,

Original Correspondence.

but wholly and solely from the mismanagement of Grand Lodge officials and Grand Committee . You will scarcely believe it , but it is nevertheless true , which I vouch for as a member of Grand Lodge , that we have not received a single report or balance sheet of financial matters ( nor cannot get ) either from Grand Secretary , Grand Treasurer , Finance Committee , or Grand Committee , since the

beginning of 18 73 , and now we are close upon the beginning of 1877 . Such a disgraceful state of matters would not be allowed to exist for a single year out of the Grand Lodge of Scotland . And what is the result of this disgraceful mismanagement of Grand Committee ? It is tnis , that while in England with a Grand Lodge Roll of 16 31 lodges , there is scarcely a dormant Lodge , while in

Scotland with a Grand Lodge roll of 575 , they have lodges dormant by the score , as can be seen by the Scottish Masonic Calendar for 1876 . This state of matters arises entirely from the want of attention by Grand Lodge and Provincial Grand Lodge , many lodges not being visited for eight or ten years , and 1 : 0 more attention paid to them than if they lived in the moon ; so much is this the case

that it has become a common saying among the lodges , that Grand Lodge only wants the cash , and rather than continue in such a state , lodges quietly drop out of existence , or in other words dormant . Not long ago a proposition was made to start a new Grand Lodge in Glasgow in opposition to the Grand Lodge in Edinburgh , while others propose the total

stopping of the supplies to bring Grand Lodge to a total stand-still . These little matters show how the wind blows and the great need there is for improvement . The Earl of Rosslyn while on the throne did his best to improve matters , but his efforts have not been followed up by Grand Committee , and things are going from bad to worse . Everything aiid everybody beyond Grand

Committee are kept in a state of total darkness , and , as may be supposed , the most ugly rumours are flying about from lodge to lodge of what the end will be , and the common belief is that tlie end will be disastrous to Grand Lodge . The Grand Lodge ought to bs the very essence of all that is pure , honourable and business-like , as

an example to the daughter lodges . Instead of that , after sixteen years' experience , I can only pronounce it a place of hollowness and rottenness , in fact a huge sham . If we send money we may get a receipt , after shewing a determination to have it . If we write upon Masonic business we may get an answer to one letter in four . The M . W . G . Master says he is aware that

thc Grand Secretary s office is in a bad state , but he will endeavour to improve it . The M . W . Grand Master has known the same for two years , and things are there growing worse , which is something like proof that it is past redemption . It would be a good thing if the M . W . G . Master would look into the Treasurer's accounts as well . Sir , I hope that you will give this a place in your next

impression . I grieve to oe compelled to wiite this , but all parties have had so many warnings to put their houses in order , that advice is no more heeded than the blowing of the wind . Silence would longer be a crime , and before that noble institution of the Craft , the most noble that ever was devised by man , lies crumbling in the dust

I , for one , will raise my voice against the mismanagement that is bringing our Grand Lodge to ruin . Should time and space permit I may have something more to say on the subject . 1 am , yours fraternally , ADAM THOMSON , S . P . G . M . Peebles and Selkirkshire , and Proxy Master for , and R . W . M . of St . John ' s Lodge , Galashiels .

THE HERVEY LODGE . To the Editor of the Freemason . Dear Sir and Brother , — I regret to find myself once more called upon to address you on the proceedings taken against a defaulting brother of my lodge . You will forgive me for saying that your editorial

remarks on the question scarcely seem to me to be either conceived or written in that spirit of " brotherly love " which you in your opening remarks enjoin upon us ; on the contrary , they partake largely of " the abuse of the ignorant " rightly condemned . Writing of the Hervey Lodge you say , " The various blunders made by that distinguished lodge are too

numerous to mention here . " Now this , I need scarcely remind you , is a seriously damaging charge . As Master of the Hervey Lodge , 1 beg to i-tate , that it is a most unfair and untruthful st itemenr , and appeirs to me must have been made with the view of prejudicing our case should it come , as you intimate , " under the notice of the Board of General Purposes . "

I may say that any complaint you , or any member of the Craft , may have to allege against my lodge will be met without hesitation , and 1 trust that I shall be able to give a satisfactory explanation of our proceedings before any legally constituted tribunal . But-I cannot be expected to meet sweeping and general assertions such as you make , and I protest iiicommuu fairness and justice against

wholesale insinuations . You further say , " that ev ; ry step the lodge has taken is constitutionally wrong an 1 illegal . " This is a bare assertion , and an attempt to support a foregone conclusion , without knowing anything of the merits ot the case . The paragraph raises a question in my mind , and which you

will forgive mc for saying , it is quite incompetent for you to decide ; at all events , it is you rather than the Hervey Lodge who have " made the subject" one " of public conversation or Masonic scandal . " I am , Sir and Brother , yours fraternally , G . HARRISON , Nov . 14 , 18 : 6 . W . M 12 O 0 ,

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