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  • March 31, 1877
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  • OUR ROYAL GRAND MASTER'S VISIT TO MALTA.
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Ad00609

TO ADVERTISERS . Ihe FREEMASON has a large circulation in all parts of the Globe , its advantages as an advertising medium can therefore scarcely be overrated . ADVERTISEMENTS should reach the Office , 198 , Fleetstreet- London , by 12 o ' clock on Wednesdays .

Ar00600

NOTICE .

To prevent delay or miscarriage , it is particuarly requested that ALL communications for the FREEMASON , may be addressed to the Office , 198 , Fleet-street , London .

Ar00601

IMPORTANT NOTICE .

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

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

To Our Readers.

TO OUR READERS .

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

NEW POSTAL RATES . Owing to a reduction in the Postal Rates , the publisher is now enabled to send the " Freemason " to the following parts abroad for One Vear for Thirteen Shillings ( payable in

advance ) : —Africa , Australia , Bombay , Canada , Cape of Good Hope , Ceylon , China , Constantinople , Demerara , France , Germany , Gibraltar , Jamaica , Malta , Newfoundland , New South Wales , New Zealand , Suez , Trinidad , United States of America . & c .

Answers To Correspondents.

Answers to Correspondents .

"F IAT J USTITIA RUAT CCKLUM . "—We cannot well review a decision of Grand Lodge , which is final . BOOKS , & C , RECEIVED . — "II Moto , " "Keystone , " " New York Dispatch , " " Hajnal , " " Eclectic . "

Births ,Marriages And Deaths.

Births , Marriages and Deaths .

[ The charge is 2 s . Cd . for announcements , not exceeding four lines , under this heading . ]

BIR 1 HS . DEAN . —On the 23 rd inst ., at Sandgate , Kent , the wife of G . H . Dean , Esq ., 12 th Lancers , of a son . EVANS . —On the 22 nd inst ., at Chad-road , Edgbaston , the wife of G . II . Evans , M . B ., F . R . C . S ., of a son . HOWEI . I .. —On the 20 th inst ., at Chaldon House , Fulham , the wife of Charles Augustus Howell , Esq ., of a daughter .

MARRIAGE . RYDER—MORGAN . —On the 22 nd inst ., at the British Embassy , Paris , by the Rev . Dr . Fordes , George W . Ryder , of 17 New Bond-street , to Lucy Mary ( Lily ) eldest daughter of the late Charles H . Morgan , Escj ., of Paris . No cards .

DEATHS . HOLDSWORTH . —On the 22 nd inst ., at Ladbroke-rcad , Notting-hill , Jane Bousfield , widow of the late S . Holdswon h , aged 80 . HUNT . —On the 23 rd inst ., at High Wycombe , Joseph Hunt , Esq ., aged 71 .

MMIS . —On the 22 nd inst ., at Durning-road , Edge-hill , Liverpool , Elizabeth Leigh , wife of H . Mahs , Esq ., aged 51 . MARSH . —On the 23 rd inst ., Mr . John Every Marsh , at the Ordnance Arms , Woolwich-common , aged 61 years , deeply lamented .

Ar00610

TheFreemason, SATURDAY , MAR . 31 , 1877 .

Our Royal Grand Master's Visit To Malta.

OUR ROYAL GRAND MASTER'S VISIT TO MALTA .

Our Royal Grand Master and the Princess were to have left for Malta , via Calais , Paris , and Marseilles , on Monday , but the journey has been postponed for a few days in consequence of a slight indisposition of H . R . H . the Prince of Wales . Probably when next we greet our

readers , we shall have to record the departure of our Grand Master and his charming * consort to the continent . As Freemasons we shall trust that this little holiday and absence may be of great benefit to the health of two persons so dear to all classes of the

community , especially to our loyal Order , as all will have seen with regret that for some little time past Her Royal Highness especially has not been so often in public as an admiring people would wish , nor gone through with her usual grace and energy the routine of Court ceremonial . May all of good go with our Royal Grand

Master and the Princess of Wales , and may we soon again , after a pleasant stay at Malta , that little "military hot house , " and Athens , welcome them safe and sound back again to old England . His Royal Highness the Prince of Wales will hold levees on the 7 th of May and the and of June .

Our Worshipful Masters.

OUR WORSHIPFUL MASTERS .

Freemasonry , like everything else just now , has to suffer from the inroads of a morbid sensationalism . Much of our Masonic writing , the didactic twaddle of " dull dogs , " the hopeless meanderings of wwbright Masons , is marked by the prevailing tendency of the hour . Statements

are made , not because they are true , but because they are startling , or spicy , or what not , and because , in fact , like a good deal of modern composition , verity and reality , are secondary considerations for those who please to write , and " write to please . " Hence we see so

often alike , in un-Masonic and Masonic columns the " magna indigestaque moles " of crude ideas , unveracious assertions ! unsound premises , and utterly illogical conclusions . Such is a recent attack on our Worshipful Masters , which appears to have been originally a Transatlantic

faultfinding with American officials , but is now transplanted to our tranquil shores . What can be the use or propriety of such a sentence as this , with reference to our Worshipful Masters , whether metropolitan or provincial ? " Were there Grand Lecturers in England at this present

time , we doubt if one half of the lodges would be able to acquit themselves even moderately well , much less with credit , in the labours of the lodge ; while in far too many cases , the attempt at working would amount simply to a most pitiable display of absolute—we feel

almost disposed to add—crass ignorance on the part of the Worshipful Masters . " Now we deny this statement in toto , by whomsoever made , and declare it to be most unjust to our English Worshipful Masters , whether in the provinces or in town . We state unhesitatingly

that any such representation of the ceremonial or intellectual efficiency of our Worshi pful Masters is nothing better than a bit of sensational writing , utterly valueless as a correct description of our contemporary Masonic lodge work , and actuall y untrue as a statement . Is it in any

sense an accurate description of our Worshipful Masters ? We repeat that it is the very reverse of correct , or even of what is considerate . We have belonged ourselves to two most ] distinguished provinces , and the lodges there are all marked , some ' strikingly so , by the uniform thorough performance by thc Worshipful

Masters of the duties of the chair . This can also be said of other provinces , and of a very large proportion of the lodges in the metropolis . That here and there we find " slovenly work " in our lodges , and inefficient Worshi pful Masters , we do not deny , but they are , very happily , the exception , and not the rule , and to say that in about one half of our lodges the work would be only

Our Worshipful Masters.

moderately weH done , and that in far too many cases the Worshipful Master is utterly i gnorant of his duties , is a parody on veracious statements a burlesque on the facts of the case . We there ' fore give to any such assertion as this an unqualified contradiction , as we consider it to

be most unsound in itself , and most unjust to our Worshipful Masters . Indeed , such a sentence must have been penned by a brother who has had but little experience of Lodge working , and has seen but very few lodges in London or in the provinces . But , as we said just now , the

temptation is to write in that sensational style which is doing so much harm to literature on every side of us . There is , we repeat it , at this moment a recklessness of quotation , an unscrupulousness of assertion , which render so much of what we daily read utterly worthless as

a trustworthy record of passing time and customs , and facts , and history . For though writers will differ , we prefer , and we fancy that our readers prefer too , what is true to what is telling , what is the naked reality without any of the meretricious adornments of paint or enamel . Above

all , we detest and despise the mere sensational writers just as we turn away from , because unreal and unsatisfactoril y in the highest degree , that sensational writing which is only spiced up in truth to suit the tastes of the ignorant and the credulous .

The "Monde Maconnique" And "The Freemason."

THE "MONDE MACONNIQUE " AND "THE FREEMASON . "

At page 476 of the last Monde Maconnique Bro . Caubet returns to the charge that those who use the word " betise " are " mal eleves . " We " au contraire , " contend that such an argument is alike precisian and puritan in the highest degree , inasmuch as the word is very commonly

employed , and is in itself alike forcible and expressive . The truth is that " betise " really was the " word " to use in respect of the remarks of our brethren Grimaux and Caubet and their little " fiasco . " And Bro . Caubet felt it to be so , " Hine illae lachrymal" For

what other or better word could we have employed ? Let our readers remember why and how we used it . Our excellent and esteemed Grand Secretary , at the consecration of the Crichton Lodge , had , as was his right and duty , alluded , not as the Grand Secretary ofHcially ,

but as Bro . John Hervey , the Consecrating Officer , to some recent proceedings in France in respect to a new agitation to remove from the French Constitution the pre-requisite condition of belief , of a general assent to the existence of God and the immortality of the soul . He had

remarked , that he regretted , as all must ( regret , the exclusion of the Bible from the French lodges , and observed , further , that if this great change took place he was afraid that it must lead to a cessation of intercourse as between the Grand Lodge of England and the Grand Orient of

France . Very weighty and sensible words , my Masters ! What is the reply that Bro . Grimaux makes to this friendly and unofficial '' avertissement" of the Grand Secretary of England , a brother who always speaks pIainly , manfully , modestly and moderately * , and whose words are therefore

always listened to with much attention and respect ? Bro . Grimaux ' s reply , fully endorsed by Bro . Caubet , is to this effect , —that there is in England a society which will sell the French lodges Bibles at the cheapest rate , ( a remark of the greatest impertinence ) , and that as long as

Bio . Hervey continues the all-powerful Secretary ofthe Grand Lodge of England such op inions will probably prevail ; equally to English brethren a most offensive statement . Were we not fully justified in calling such a line of argument issuing from such an animus of irritability "

and intolerance , a " betise ? We think we were , add we are quite ready to be judged by the educated , the " bien eleves" of our French brethren . Such is not the way to meet a friendly remonstrance and a kindly warning when offered by so considerate and so able a Mason as Bro *

Hervey , and we resented such words then , and always should resent such utterances , by whomsoever made , knowing that we shall carry * w ) W us the hearty concurrence of all our Eng lish Fraternity , Bro . Caubet amusingly declares thaj because we do not take his views we are fl 0 '

“The Freemason: 1877-03-31, Page 6” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 9 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fvl/issues/fvl_31031877/page/6/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
CONTENTS. Article 1
REPORTS OF MASONIC MEETINGS. Article 1
Royal Arch. Article 2
MARK MASONRY IN NEW ZEALAND. Article 2
JUBILEE FESTIVAL OF ST. DAVID'S LODGE, No. 384, BANGOR . Article 2
CONSECRATION OF THE STUART LODGE, No. 1632. Article 3
CONSECRATION OF THE MIZPAH LODGE, No. 1671. Article 4
Masonic and Generral Tidings. Article 5
Untitled Ad 6
Untitled Article 6
Untitled Article 6
TO OUR READERS. Article 6
Answers to Correspondents. Article 6
Births ,Marriages and Deaths. Article 6
Untitled Article 6
OUR ROYAL GRAND MASTER'S VISIT TO MALTA. Article 6
OUR WORSHIPFUL MASTERS. Article 6
THE "MONDE MACONNIQUE" AND "THE FREEMASON." Article 6
THE NEW GRAND SECRETARY FOR SCOTLAND. Article 7
THE OXFORD AND CAMBRIDGE BOAT RACE. Article 7
KENNING'S MASONIC CYCLOPÆDIA. Article 7
Original Correspondence. Article 8
Multum in Parbo, or Masonic Notes and Queries. Article 9
PROVINCIAL GRAND CHAPTER OF HERTFORDSHIRE. Article 9
PROVINCIAL GRAND MARK LODGE OF MIDDLESEX AND SURREY. Article 9
METROPOLITAN MASONIC MEETINGS. Article 9
MASONIC MEETINGS IN WEST LANCASHIRE AND CHESHIRE. Article 10
Untitled Ad 10
Untitled Ad 10
Untitled Ad 10
Untitled Ad 10
Untitled Ad 10
Untitled Ad 10
Untitled Ad 10
Untitled Ad 10
Untitled Ad 10
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Ad00609

TO ADVERTISERS . Ihe FREEMASON has a large circulation in all parts of the Globe , its advantages as an advertising medium can therefore scarcely be overrated . ADVERTISEMENTS should reach the Office , 198 , Fleetstreet- London , by 12 o ' clock on Wednesdays .

Ar00600

NOTICE .

To prevent delay or miscarriage , it is particuarly requested that ALL communications for the FREEMASON , may be addressed to the Office , 198 , Fleet-street , London .

Ar00601

IMPORTANT NOTICE .

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

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

To Our Readers.

TO OUR READERS .

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

NEW POSTAL RATES . Owing to a reduction in the Postal Rates , the publisher is now enabled to send the " Freemason " to the following parts abroad for One Vear for Thirteen Shillings ( payable in

advance ) : —Africa , Australia , Bombay , Canada , Cape of Good Hope , Ceylon , China , Constantinople , Demerara , France , Germany , Gibraltar , Jamaica , Malta , Newfoundland , New South Wales , New Zealand , Suez , Trinidad , United States of America . & c .

Answers To Correspondents.

Answers to Correspondents .

"F IAT J USTITIA RUAT CCKLUM . "—We cannot well review a decision of Grand Lodge , which is final . BOOKS , & C , RECEIVED . — "II Moto , " "Keystone , " " New York Dispatch , " " Hajnal , " " Eclectic . "

Births ,Marriages And Deaths.

Births , Marriages and Deaths .

[ The charge is 2 s . Cd . for announcements , not exceeding four lines , under this heading . ]

BIR 1 HS . DEAN . —On the 23 rd inst ., at Sandgate , Kent , the wife of G . H . Dean , Esq ., 12 th Lancers , of a son . EVANS . —On the 22 nd inst ., at Chad-road , Edgbaston , the wife of G . II . Evans , M . B ., F . R . C . S ., of a son . HOWEI . I .. —On the 20 th inst ., at Chaldon House , Fulham , the wife of Charles Augustus Howell , Esq ., of a daughter .

MARRIAGE . RYDER—MORGAN . —On the 22 nd inst ., at the British Embassy , Paris , by the Rev . Dr . Fordes , George W . Ryder , of 17 New Bond-street , to Lucy Mary ( Lily ) eldest daughter of the late Charles H . Morgan , Escj ., of Paris . No cards .

DEATHS . HOLDSWORTH . —On the 22 nd inst ., at Ladbroke-rcad , Notting-hill , Jane Bousfield , widow of the late S . Holdswon h , aged 80 . HUNT . —On the 23 rd inst ., at High Wycombe , Joseph Hunt , Esq ., aged 71 .

MMIS . —On the 22 nd inst ., at Durning-road , Edge-hill , Liverpool , Elizabeth Leigh , wife of H . Mahs , Esq ., aged 51 . MARSH . —On the 23 rd inst ., Mr . John Every Marsh , at the Ordnance Arms , Woolwich-common , aged 61 years , deeply lamented .

Ar00610

TheFreemason, SATURDAY , MAR . 31 , 1877 .

Our Royal Grand Master's Visit To Malta.

OUR ROYAL GRAND MASTER'S VISIT TO MALTA .

Our Royal Grand Master and the Princess were to have left for Malta , via Calais , Paris , and Marseilles , on Monday , but the journey has been postponed for a few days in consequence of a slight indisposition of H . R . H . the Prince of Wales . Probably when next we greet our

readers , we shall have to record the departure of our Grand Master and his charming * consort to the continent . As Freemasons we shall trust that this little holiday and absence may be of great benefit to the health of two persons so dear to all classes of the

community , especially to our loyal Order , as all will have seen with regret that for some little time past Her Royal Highness especially has not been so often in public as an admiring people would wish , nor gone through with her usual grace and energy the routine of Court ceremonial . May all of good go with our Royal Grand

Master and the Princess of Wales , and may we soon again , after a pleasant stay at Malta , that little "military hot house , " and Athens , welcome them safe and sound back again to old England . His Royal Highness the Prince of Wales will hold levees on the 7 th of May and the and of June .

Our Worshipful Masters.

OUR WORSHIPFUL MASTERS .

Freemasonry , like everything else just now , has to suffer from the inroads of a morbid sensationalism . Much of our Masonic writing , the didactic twaddle of " dull dogs , " the hopeless meanderings of wwbright Masons , is marked by the prevailing tendency of the hour . Statements

are made , not because they are true , but because they are startling , or spicy , or what not , and because , in fact , like a good deal of modern composition , verity and reality , are secondary considerations for those who please to write , and " write to please . " Hence we see so

often alike , in un-Masonic and Masonic columns the " magna indigestaque moles " of crude ideas , unveracious assertions ! unsound premises , and utterly illogical conclusions . Such is a recent attack on our Worshipful Masters , which appears to have been originally a Transatlantic

faultfinding with American officials , but is now transplanted to our tranquil shores . What can be the use or propriety of such a sentence as this , with reference to our Worshipful Masters , whether metropolitan or provincial ? " Were there Grand Lecturers in England at this present

time , we doubt if one half of the lodges would be able to acquit themselves even moderately well , much less with credit , in the labours of the lodge ; while in far too many cases , the attempt at working would amount simply to a most pitiable display of absolute—we feel

almost disposed to add—crass ignorance on the part of the Worshipful Masters . " Now we deny this statement in toto , by whomsoever made , and declare it to be most unjust to our English Worshipful Masters , whether in the provinces or in town . We state unhesitatingly

that any such representation of the ceremonial or intellectual efficiency of our Worshi pful Masters is nothing better than a bit of sensational writing , utterly valueless as a correct description of our contemporary Masonic lodge work , and actuall y untrue as a statement . Is it in any

sense an accurate description of our Worshipful Masters ? We repeat that it is the very reverse of correct , or even of what is considerate . We have belonged ourselves to two most ] distinguished provinces , and the lodges there are all marked , some ' strikingly so , by the uniform thorough performance by thc Worshipful

Masters of the duties of the chair . This can also be said of other provinces , and of a very large proportion of the lodges in the metropolis . That here and there we find " slovenly work " in our lodges , and inefficient Worshi pful Masters , we do not deny , but they are , very happily , the exception , and not the rule , and to say that in about one half of our lodges the work would be only

Our Worshipful Masters.

moderately weH done , and that in far too many cases the Worshipful Master is utterly i gnorant of his duties , is a parody on veracious statements a burlesque on the facts of the case . We there ' fore give to any such assertion as this an unqualified contradiction , as we consider it to

be most unsound in itself , and most unjust to our Worshipful Masters . Indeed , such a sentence must have been penned by a brother who has had but little experience of Lodge working , and has seen but very few lodges in London or in the provinces . But , as we said just now , the

temptation is to write in that sensational style which is doing so much harm to literature on every side of us . There is , we repeat it , at this moment a recklessness of quotation , an unscrupulousness of assertion , which render so much of what we daily read utterly worthless as

a trustworthy record of passing time and customs , and facts , and history . For though writers will differ , we prefer , and we fancy that our readers prefer too , what is true to what is telling , what is the naked reality without any of the meretricious adornments of paint or enamel . Above

all , we detest and despise the mere sensational writers just as we turn away from , because unreal and unsatisfactoril y in the highest degree , that sensational writing which is only spiced up in truth to suit the tastes of the ignorant and the credulous .

The "Monde Maconnique" And "The Freemason."

THE "MONDE MACONNIQUE " AND "THE FREEMASON . "

At page 476 of the last Monde Maconnique Bro . Caubet returns to the charge that those who use the word " betise " are " mal eleves . " We " au contraire , " contend that such an argument is alike precisian and puritan in the highest degree , inasmuch as the word is very commonly

employed , and is in itself alike forcible and expressive . The truth is that " betise " really was the " word " to use in respect of the remarks of our brethren Grimaux and Caubet and their little " fiasco . " And Bro . Caubet felt it to be so , " Hine illae lachrymal" For

what other or better word could we have employed ? Let our readers remember why and how we used it . Our excellent and esteemed Grand Secretary , at the consecration of the Crichton Lodge , had , as was his right and duty , alluded , not as the Grand Secretary ofHcially ,

but as Bro . John Hervey , the Consecrating Officer , to some recent proceedings in France in respect to a new agitation to remove from the French Constitution the pre-requisite condition of belief , of a general assent to the existence of God and the immortality of the soul . He had

remarked , that he regretted , as all must ( regret , the exclusion of the Bible from the French lodges , and observed , further , that if this great change took place he was afraid that it must lead to a cessation of intercourse as between the Grand Lodge of England and the Grand Orient of

France . Very weighty and sensible words , my Masters ! What is the reply that Bro . Grimaux makes to this friendly and unofficial '' avertissement" of the Grand Secretary of England , a brother who always speaks pIainly , manfully , modestly and moderately * , and whose words are therefore

always listened to with much attention and respect ? Bro . Grimaux ' s reply , fully endorsed by Bro . Caubet , is to this effect , —that there is in England a society which will sell the French lodges Bibles at the cheapest rate , ( a remark of the greatest impertinence ) , and that as long as

Bio . Hervey continues the all-powerful Secretary ofthe Grand Lodge of England such op inions will probably prevail ; equally to English brethren a most offensive statement . Were we not fully justified in calling such a line of argument issuing from such an animus of irritability "

and intolerance , a " betise ? We think we were , add we are quite ready to be judged by the educated , the " bien eleves" of our French brethren . Such is not the way to meet a friendly remonstrance and a kindly warning when offered by so considerate and so able a Mason as Bro *

Hervey , and we resented such words then , and always should resent such utterances , by whomsoever made , knowing that we shall carry * w ) W us the hearty concurrence of all our Eng lish Fraternity , Bro . Caubet amusingly declares thaj because we do not take his views we are fl 0 '

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