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  • Aug. 30, 1873
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  • THE UNITED ORDERS OF THE TEMPLE AND HOSPITAL AND THE PRESS.
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Ar00800

NOTICE .

Tlie Subscription to THE P REEMASON is now ios . per annum , post-free , payable

in advance . Vol . I ., bound in cloth 4 s- <> l 1-Vol . II ., ditto is . 6 d . Vol . III ., ditto 15 s- od . Vol . IV ., ditto 15 s- od * Vol . V ., ditto * . ***• ° ' l-Reading Cases to hold 52 numbers ... 2 s . Od . Ditto ditto 4- do . ... is . 6 d .

United States of America . TUB FnEEMASON is delivered free in any part of the United States for 12 s . per annum , payable in advance . The Freemason is published on Saturday Mornings in time for lhe early trains .

The price of the Freemason is Twopence per week ; annual subscription , ios . ( payable in advance . J All communications , letters , & c , to be addressed to thc F . ditor , IC-8 , Fleet-street , E . C . The Editor will pay careful attention lo all MSS . entrusted toh ' nn , but cannot undertake to return them unless accompanied liy postage tamos .

Ar00801

NOTICE . All Communications , Advertisements , & c , intended for insertion in the Number of lhe following

Saturday , must reach the Office not later than 6 o ' clock on IVednesdaii evening .

Liverpool Theatres, &C.

LIVERPOOL THEATRES , & c .

Week ending September 6 . ROYAL ALEXANDRA THEATRE , Lime-. arse ; . —Lessee Hro . E . s > akcr . " Charles 1 . "

ROYAL AMPHITHEATRE , Great Charlotte-street . —Lessee Uro . I-l . Leslie . " Mi » s Chc-tei " PRINCE OF WALES THEATRE , Claytim-soun-e . —Lessee Mr . Seiton Party . 1 * > ton ' s lOe . i 1-14 tic , ** Orphean , ; m , i l-. uvvrlice . "

TH * . ATRE ROYAL Williams , m-s .-u .-m-. — Le : see , Urn . lie Freece . " . \ Dtnis-cs , or it , Tv-. tta elite . " " ' - Via . kers and Shaker ; ., " and Miscellaneous Luteinliniiicii * . ST . JAMES'S UALL , Lime-street . —I ' niprielnr , Uro . S . Hague . Special Artistes and i ' nteiainme . NEW STAR MUSIC HALL , \\ i , ' i .--- |* s « ii-saa-i-i-. — : \ I a linger , liro . Saundeis . Opera and Special Atlva . tiu-.-. s .

ROTUNDA THEATRE and MUSIC MALL .-Proprietor , Mr . D . 'iranncli . Miscellaneous Enlertaiiiiueiiis . NEWSOME'S CIRCUS , Whitechapel . —Scene , ul" the Circle and other Entertainments ; Q UEEN'S HALL . — " Enteral . ! Minstrel-, Humorists , and Da ncers . "

Ar00806

TheFreemason. SATURDAY , AUOUST ,- ' ° > 187 , *; .

The United Orders Of The Temple And Hospital And The Press.

THE UNITED ORDERS OF THE TEMPLE AND HOSPITAL AND THE PRESS .

BY BRO . KMRA HOLMES . The impertinent self-appointed mentor ol the

Prince 01 Wales must have h .. e ! an attack ol jaundice , or shall we coin a word , ami call it "Ten . 1 plavpb . 0 bia , " when it published the a-. liclcon the "Order of the Temple , ' now * under review ;

but unfortunately , in * . cniiiig it . ; :-ple . n on the august ceremonial which rous-cd it- ; lie- •--p-.-ss . iM a because its representative was no : iuvil--d tothe f-ast—belravs what we can onlv dcsciibcas crass

ignorance m commenting oil the meeting . The writer , it woultl •;\ ro , had recently read "Jvanhoe *' - — ha-i probably witnessed thc performance of ' * Keb , , . a " - ., inl eatliered the litt ' . i

The United Orders Of The Temple And Hospital And The Press.

historical knowledge lie possessed from the pages of Sir Walter Scott . The joke is really too good—The Spectator quoting Sir Walter Scott as a reliable authority

on matters antiquarian . Our would-be-clever contemporary , in speaking sarcastically of the officers present at the Convent General , in April , takes exception to tlie style " Most Eminent " as

applied to the Grand Master , no doubt forgetting , or , might we say , more probably not knowing that that title was precisely what was used by the Knights of St . John , with whom the Knights

Templar were amalgamated . If the author of the article in The Spectator will condescend to refer to Porter ' s History of the Knights of Malta * he will lind a letter thus headed . *—

" Charles II ., by the Grace of God , ot Great Britain , France , and Ireland , King , Defender of the Faith , Sec . "

" To the Mosl Eminent Prince , the Lord Nicholas Cottoner , Grand Master of the Order of Malta , our well-beloved cousin and friend , Greeting :

" Most Eminent Prince , " * \ c , & c . The letter concludes , " we therefore amicably beseech your Eminence , \ c , " and is signed , Your Highness ' s

Cousin and Friend , Charles Rex . A letter from Queen Anne to the Grand Master , in 171 , 3 , is couched in the following style :

" Anne , by the Grace ol God , . Sx , to the Most Illustrious and Most High Prince , the Lord Raymond Percllos , Grantl Master ul' the Order of Malta , " and is signed "Your Highness ' s good

Cousin and Friend , Anne R . " Emanuel Pinto , Grand Master ( under whose sanction , it is said , the Malta Order was conferred on Freemasons ) , who died in 1773 , was not

conlent to be "MostEminent only , or '' Illustrious , " but claimed for his ambassadors at foreign courts the prerogatives of those who represented the munarchs of Europe , and for himself demanded the

title , of Must Eminent Highness , whereas his predecessors , Porter alleges , in a somewhat contradictory manner , had all been contented with that of Eminence .

It woultl thus appear that Alost Eminent is b y no means an inappropriate title for the Grand Master of the United Orders of Knights Templars , and Knights of St . John of Jerusalem .

Our contemporary is pleased to sneer al the Earl of Limerick , the Great Piior , and adds :--" lt is only necessary to reatl Itanhoc to learn that the chief of a Templar Convent was

Preceptor , nut Prioi . We are very grateful lor the information , but the Preceptor i . s the chief of our Convents or Encampments , antl not the Prior ,

who , however , is the head af a priory of Malta . Perhaps The Spectator will forgive us if we suggest tiiat the Templar houses were not culLd convents al all , but preceptories , anil that

the author of Ivauhoe is tne last man we should go to ioi * concet ¦ a-i . kiiiarian knowledge . If we rcinc'iiber right , in the very book Tlie Spectator quote .- * , ' * Ivauhoe , " Sir Walter ^ colt makes the

couiti * . is . address Richard I . as " your majesty , " a title which was not used by the Kings of England for centuries afterwards . Wc are quite ready to admit the truth of one ¦ ' ' ¦ ' \ ol . . ' ., p . -i > , S .

The United Orders Of The Temple And Hospital And The Press.

statement of The Spectator , that the Duke of Manchester ' s Knights of Malta are not true Johanniter , and here for once The Spectator is

right , as the Sacred Council at Rome , the Supreme body in the Order of St . John , repudiates the claims of the so-called Anglican langue .

By the way it is whispered that the Manchester Knights , or Anglican Langue , as they prefer to be called , are making strong efforts to secure , if they have not alread y purchased , St .

John ' s Gate , Clerkenwell , erst the head quarters of the Knights of St . John . It is said that Sir George Bowyer and the Roman Catholic Kni ghts ( but with how much

truth we know not ) have been equally desirous of getting possession , but remembering that the chief authorities at Rome refuse to acknowledge the legitimacy of the English langue , the mere

holding of St . John ' s Gate will no more make the Duke ' s lieges real Johanniter than the possession of Temple Church makes the London barristers Knights Templar . Our contemporary

in attempting to describe the Installation of the Prince of Wales as Grand Master is positivelyamusing in its mendacious impertinence , when it

says that " having passed the precincts of the Temple ofJI'iUis ' s , " as it describes , with infinite wit , the place of meeting , " than he was launched into the centre of a series of scenes of the most

arrant tomfoolery , curiously variegated with maudlin piety . " We have stated before that the account of the proceedings given in the Dail y Telegraph was incorrect , but it was nevertheless

fairly written , as most of its descriptive articles are . We cannot say so much for The Spectator . The whole tone of the article is splenetic and contemptible , aud the ribald manner it adopts to

spit its venom on the Order of the Temple is strongly suggestive of an old fable , often quoted , and often needing quotation .

Is it possible that the writer of the article is some canny Scot , who tries to decry what he , in his heart of hearts , only covets ? Is it because the Prince of Wales has shown

so great an interest in the Convent General of the Order of the Temple , whose Statutes the Scotch repudiated before they had properly weighed the consequences of their conduct that this article was written r

Can it be the old story of "The Fox and the Grapes ' revived for the benefit of a few malcontents : The Spectator ' s logic is very line .

At the commencement of the article under review , it ridicules the notion that the Masonie Knights are true descendants of the ancient Templars , apostrophises the shades ot Hugh de

Payen and Brian de Bois Gilbert , and talks of " the marvellous transmogrified resuscitation of knights all dust , and swords all rust . " At the conclusion it is vastly indignant that

the heir to the throne , with the Queen ' s sanction should give away "trumpery titles and pinchbeck decorations , " a graceful way of sneering at the Grand Cross conferred upon the Emperor of

Germany , the King of Sweden , and a few other nobodies The Spectator does not choose to recognise , and then says that " real nobility and knighthood lose somewhat of their worth , " while such things are allowed .

“The Freemason: 1873-08-30, Page 8” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 29 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fvl/issues/fvl_30081873/page/8/.
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TABLE OF CONTENTS. Article 3
REPORTS OF MASONIC MEETINGS. Article 3
Royal Arch. Article 4
Mark Masonry. Article 5
Reviews. Article 5
Masonic Tidings. Article 6
THE DIVINE OMNIPRESENCE. Article 7
Untitled Article 8
Untitled Article 8
LIVERPOOL THEATRES, &c. Article 8
Untitled Article 8
THE UNITED ORDERS OF THE TEMPLE AND HOSPITAL AND THE PRESS. Article 8
NOBLE MASONIC THOUGHTS. Article 9
UNITED GRAND LODGE. Article 10
MASONIC FETE. Article 10
KENTUCKY MASONIC ORPHANS' HOME. Article 11
Original Correspondence. Article 11
BRITISH ARCHÆOLOGlCAL ASSOCIATION. Article 11
METROPOLITAN MASONIC MEETINGS. Article 12
MASONIC MEETINGS IN LIVERPOOL, &c. Article 12
MASONIC MEETINGS IN GLASGOW. Article 12
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Ar00800

NOTICE .

Tlie Subscription to THE P REEMASON is now ios . per annum , post-free , payable

in advance . Vol . I ., bound in cloth 4 s- <> l 1-Vol . II ., ditto is . 6 d . Vol . III ., ditto 15 s- od . Vol . IV ., ditto 15 s- od * Vol . V ., ditto * . ***• ° ' l-Reading Cases to hold 52 numbers ... 2 s . Od . Ditto ditto 4- do . ... is . 6 d .

United States of America . TUB FnEEMASON is delivered free in any part of the United States for 12 s . per annum , payable in advance . The Freemason is published on Saturday Mornings in time for lhe early trains .

The price of the Freemason is Twopence per week ; annual subscription , ios . ( payable in advance . J All communications , letters , & c , to be addressed to thc F . ditor , IC-8 , Fleet-street , E . C . The Editor will pay careful attention lo all MSS . entrusted toh ' nn , but cannot undertake to return them unless accompanied liy postage tamos .

Ar00801

NOTICE . All Communications , Advertisements , & c , intended for insertion in the Number of lhe following

Saturday , must reach the Office not later than 6 o ' clock on IVednesdaii evening .

Liverpool Theatres, &C.

LIVERPOOL THEATRES , & c .

Week ending September 6 . ROYAL ALEXANDRA THEATRE , Lime-. arse ; . —Lessee Hro . E . s > akcr . " Charles 1 . "

ROYAL AMPHITHEATRE , Great Charlotte-street . —Lessee Uro . I-l . Leslie . " Mi » s Chc-tei " PRINCE OF WALES THEATRE , Claytim-soun-e . —Lessee Mr . Seiton Party . 1 * > ton ' s lOe . i 1-14 tic , ** Orphean , ; m , i l-. uvvrlice . "

TH * . ATRE ROYAL Williams , m-s .-u .-m-. — Le : see , Urn . lie Freece . " . \ Dtnis-cs , or it , Tv-. tta elite . " " ' - Via . kers and Shaker ; ., " and Miscellaneous Luteinliniiicii * . ST . JAMES'S UALL , Lime-street . —I ' niprielnr , Uro . S . Hague . Special Artistes and i ' nteiainme . NEW STAR MUSIC HALL , \\ i , ' i .--- |* s « ii-saa-i-i-. — : \ I a linger , liro . Saundeis . Opera and Special Atlva . tiu-.-. s .

ROTUNDA THEATRE and MUSIC MALL .-Proprietor , Mr . D . 'iranncli . Miscellaneous Enlertaiiiiueiiis . NEWSOME'S CIRCUS , Whitechapel . —Scene , ul" the Circle and other Entertainments ; Q UEEN'S HALL . — " Enteral . ! Minstrel-, Humorists , and Da ncers . "

Ar00806

TheFreemason. SATURDAY , AUOUST ,- ' ° > 187 , *; .

The United Orders Of The Temple And Hospital And The Press.

THE UNITED ORDERS OF THE TEMPLE AND HOSPITAL AND THE PRESS .

BY BRO . KMRA HOLMES . The impertinent self-appointed mentor ol the

Prince 01 Wales must have h .. e ! an attack ol jaundice , or shall we coin a word , ami call it "Ten . 1 plavpb . 0 bia , " when it published the a-. liclcon the "Order of the Temple , ' now * under review ;

but unfortunately , in * . cniiiig it . ; :-ple . n on the august ceremonial which rous-cd it- ; lie- •--p-.-ss . iM a because its representative was no : iuvil--d tothe f-ast—belravs what we can onlv dcsciibcas crass

ignorance m commenting oil the meeting . The writer , it woultl •;\ ro , had recently read "Jvanhoe *' - — ha-i probably witnessed thc performance of ' * Keb , , . a " - ., inl eatliered the litt ' . i

The United Orders Of The Temple And Hospital And The Press.

historical knowledge lie possessed from the pages of Sir Walter Scott . The joke is really too good—The Spectator quoting Sir Walter Scott as a reliable authority

on matters antiquarian . Our would-be-clever contemporary , in speaking sarcastically of the officers present at the Convent General , in April , takes exception to tlie style " Most Eminent " as

applied to the Grand Master , no doubt forgetting , or , might we say , more probably not knowing that that title was precisely what was used by the Knights of St . John , with whom the Knights

Templar were amalgamated . If the author of the article in The Spectator will condescend to refer to Porter ' s History of the Knights of Malta * he will lind a letter thus headed . *—

" Charles II ., by the Grace of God , ot Great Britain , France , and Ireland , King , Defender of the Faith , Sec . "

" To the Mosl Eminent Prince , the Lord Nicholas Cottoner , Grand Master of the Order of Malta , our well-beloved cousin and friend , Greeting :

" Most Eminent Prince , " * \ c , & c . The letter concludes , " we therefore amicably beseech your Eminence , \ c , " and is signed , Your Highness ' s

Cousin and Friend , Charles Rex . A letter from Queen Anne to the Grand Master , in 171 , 3 , is couched in the following style :

" Anne , by the Grace ol God , . Sx , to the Most Illustrious and Most High Prince , the Lord Raymond Percllos , Grantl Master ul' the Order of Malta , " and is signed "Your Highness ' s good

Cousin and Friend , Anne R . " Emanuel Pinto , Grand Master ( under whose sanction , it is said , the Malta Order was conferred on Freemasons ) , who died in 1773 , was not

conlent to be "MostEminent only , or '' Illustrious , " but claimed for his ambassadors at foreign courts the prerogatives of those who represented the munarchs of Europe , and for himself demanded the

title , of Must Eminent Highness , whereas his predecessors , Porter alleges , in a somewhat contradictory manner , had all been contented with that of Eminence .

It woultl thus appear that Alost Eminent is b y no means an inappropriate title for the Grand Master of the United Orders of Knights Templars , and Knights of St . John of Jerusalem .

Our contemporary is pleased to sneer al the Earl of Limerick , the Great Piior , and adds :--" lt is only necessary to reatl Itanhoc to learn that the chief of a Templar Convent was

Preceptor , nut Prioi . We are very grateful lor the information , but the Preceptor i . s the chief of our Convents or Encampments , antl not the Prior ,

who , however , is the head af a priory of Malta . Perhaps The Spectator will forgive us if we suggest tiiat the Templar houses were not culLd convents al all , but preceptories , anil that

the author of Ivauhoe is tne last man we should go to ioi * concet ¦ a-i . kiiiarian knowledge . If we rcinc'iiber right , in the very book Tlie Spectator quote .- * , ' * Ivauhoe , " Sir Walter ^ colt makes the

couiti * . is . address Richard I . as " your majesty , " a title which was not used by the Kings of England for centuries afterwards . Wc are quite ready to admit the truth of one ¦ ' ' ¦ ' \ ol . . ' ., p . -i > , S .

The United Orders Of The Temple And Hospital And The Press.

statement of The Spectator , that the Duke of Manchester ' s Knights of Malta are not true Johanniter , and here for once The Spectator is

right , as the Sacred Council at Rome , the Supreme body in the Order of St . John , repudiates the claims of the so-called Anglican langue .

By the way it is whispered that the Manchester Knights , or Anglican Langue , as they prefer to be called , are making strong efforts to secure , if they have not alread y purchased , St .

John ' s Gate , Clerkenwell , erst the head quarters of the Knights of St . John . It is said that Sir George Bowyer and the Roman Catholic Kni ghts ( but with how much

truth we know not ) have been equally desirous of getting possession , but remembering that the chief authorities at Rome refuse to acknowledge the legitimacy of the English langue , the mere

holding of St . John ' s Gate will no more make the Duke ' s lieges real Johanniter than the possession of Temple Church makes the London barristers Knights Templar . Our contemporary

in attempting to describe the Installation of the Prince of Wales as Grand Master is positivelyamusing in its mendacious impertinence , when it

says that " having passed the precincts of the Temple ofJI'iUis ' s , " as it describes , with infinite wit , the place of meeting , " than he was launched into the centre of a series of scenes of the most

arrant tomfoolery , curiously variegated with maudlin piety . " We have stated before that the account of the proceedings given in the Dail y Telegraph was incorrect , but it was nevertheless

fairly written , as most of its descriptive articles are . We cannot say so much for The Spectator . The whole tone of the article is splenetic and contemptible , aud the ribald manner it adopts to

spit its venom on the Order of the Temple is strongly suggestive of an old fable , often quoted , and often needing quotation .

Is it possible that the writer of the article is some canny Scot , who tries to decry what he , in his heart of hearts , only covets ? Is it because the Prince of Wales has shown

so great an interest in the Convent General of the Order of the Temple , whose Statutes the Scotch repudiated before they had properly weighed the consequences of their conduct that this article was written r

Can it be the old story of "The Fox and the Grapes ' revived for the benefit of a few malcontents : The Spectator ' s logic is very line .

At the commencement of the article under review , it ridicules the notion that the Masonie Knights are true descendants of the ancient Templars , apostrophises the shades ot Hugh de

Payen and Brian de Bois Gilbert , and talks of " the marvellous transmogrified resuscitation of knights all dust , and swords all rust . " At the conclusion it is vastly indignant that

the heir to the throne , with the Queen ' s sanction should give away "trumpery titles and pinchbeck decorations , " a graceful way of sneering at the Grand Cross conferred upon the Emperor of

Germany , the King of Sweden , and a few other nobodies The Spectator does not choose to recognise , and then says that " real nobility and knighthood lose somewhat of their worth , " while such things are allowed .

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