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  • The Masonic Magazine
  • March 1, 1877
  • Page 27
  • A LONDONER'S VISIT TO A NORTH YORK DALE.
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The Masonic Magazine, March 1, 1877: Page 27

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A Centennial Curiosity.

and Doctors of Divinity in America are active Masons . The Anti-Masons condescendingly admit that they are good ( for that cannot be denied ) , but then they have boon decoyed , and are now actually worse than drunkards , smokers or perjurers !

That is an indictment , indeed—and one that by its self-evident absurdity convicts its authors , the Anti-Masons , as stupendous falsifiers , out of their own mouths . But Freemasonry also threatens the

State ! This was once tho cry of the Anti-Masonic party in this State and nation , but after playing antics before high Heaven that it will never play again , it gave up the ghost , and the Anti-Masons of to day are the shadows of that ghost . AVe quote

again : " Freemasonry is Satan ' s masterpiece—a terrible snare to men . It sits this moment as a nightmare on all the moral energies of our Government and utterly paralyzes tho arm of justice . It was the mysterious snare of President Johnson and

shield for the vilest murderers of tho South . " AA hat a piece of Quixotic imagination is this !—How the nightmare must have brooded over its author ! AVe could

not desire a more defenceless windmill to tilt against ! Johnson , the Freemason President of the United States , ensnared by our Craft ! The arm of national justice paralyzed ! Southern murderers protected under the ajgis of Masonry ! The bare statement of these absurd charges is their

sufficient refutation . But there is one discovery made by the author of these tracts that overtops all ire have previously noticed , viz ., that Freemasonry is "the parent of the Ku Klux Klan . " Tho system of ratiocination by ivhich this statement is

arrived at is this : Freemasonry was the earliest of all secret societies , and therefore responsible for all that have followed it ! If there had been no Freemasons , there Avould have been no midnight masked murderers ! This reasoning may be clear

to some orders of minds—such as are found inside of asylums , and to those feebleminded Anti-Masons who , for a time , are outside , but to all men of even only ordinary intellect , the conclusion will be considered to be a prodigious non sequitur . ' ¦ "We have noticed but a few of the absurdities of these Anti-Masonic tracts , foi t ° do more would be to physic the reticle *

A Centennial Curiosity.

ad nauseam . They certainly arc a Centennial curiosity . They remind us of thc play that was intended by its author to be a tragedy , but was taken by thc audience for a comedy . AVo cannot but laugh at their statementsfroni beginning to end , for they are all the purest fiction , not one of them being even tne most remotely based upon fact .

A Londoner's Visit To A North York Dale.

A LONDONER'S VISIT TO A NORTH YORK DALE .

BY OLIVER LOUIS TWEDDELL , Author of " Old Gregory ' s Ghost , " etc . TOMLINSON was a Cockney , a fussy , dancing , smiling , dandy little Cockney . Now ivhen one says a Cockney , people

generally imagine a swell with big eyeglass , small brain , tight boots and kid gloves , who martyrs the Queen ' s English , drawls and chops his words in talking , in a manner that sets Nuttall at defiance , and would almost have made Dr . Johnson

taken fits at the degeneration of the age . Now Tomlinson , be it understood , was not a Cockney of this sort . No , no . No man spoke better English than Mr . Tomlinson , and , though by no means a vain man , if there was one thing more than another that he prided himself upon , it

was on his superior intimacy with Lindlay Murray . But I am not going to descant on the merits and demerits of Mr . Tomlinson , though he had , of course , his share of both . I am merely going to relate a small adventure which occurred to him , and it

came about as follows . Mr . Tomlinson had just come into the possession of a nice sum of money , by the death of a distant relation , whose sole heir he proved to be , and he naturall y wished to turn his newly acquired capital

to good account . It struck him that land would be the safest investment , and seeing by the newspapers that a small estate , with good fishing and shooting , was advertised for sale , p leasantly situated in one of those

“The Masonic Magazine: 1877-03-01, Page 27” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 13 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01031877/page/27/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
Monthly Masonic Summary. Article 1
THE "ARMS" OF THE FREEMASONS IN ENGLAND. Article 2
THE REV. MR. PANDI AND FREEMASONRY. Article 3
WONDERS OF OPERATIVE MASONRY. Article 4
LETTER OF BRO. W. J. HUGHAN, OF ENGLAND, TO THE GRAND LODGE OF OHIO. Article 8
AN OLD, OLD STORY. Article 11
LIFE'S LESSON. Article 14
LIFE'S ROLL-CALL. Article 14
A SOFT ANSWER. Article 16
SOCIAL PROBLEMS AND THEIR PEACEFUL SOLUTION. Article 16
SONNET. Article 20
AN ORATION UPON MASONRY. Article 20
THE ENCHANTED ISLE OF THE SEA. Article 23
A CENTENNIAL CURIOSITY. Article 26
A LONDONER'S VISIT TO A NORTH YORK DALE. Article 27
DONT TAKE IT TO HEART. Article 29
THE ANCIENT MYSTERIES AND MODERN FREEMASONRY; THEIR ANALOGIES CONSIDERED. Article 30
THE LADY MURIEL. Article 32
THIS MORGAN AFFAIR. Article 36
FREEMASONRY IN AMERICA. Article 39
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE AND ART. Article 41
LEEDLE YACOB STRAUSS. Article 44
NOTES BY FATHER FOY ON HIS SECOND LECTURE. Article 45
Hunt's Playing Cards. Article 49
Dick Radclyffe and Co's Illustrated Catalogue of Seeds. Article 49
The Cosmopolitan Masonic Calendar, Diary, and Pocket Book for 1877. Article 49
GEORGE KENNING, MASONIC PUBLISHER Article 50
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

A Centennial Curiosity.

and Doctors of Divinity in America are active Masons . The Anti-Masons condescendingly admit that they are good ( for that cannot be denied ) , but then they have boon decoyed , and are now actually worse than drunkards , smokers or perjurers !

That is an indictment , indeed—and one that by its self-evident absurdity convicts its authors , the Anti-Masons , as stupendous falsifiers , out of their own mouths . But Freemasonry also threatens the

State ! This was once tho cry of the Anti-Masonic party in this State and nation , but after playing antics before high Heaven that it will never play again , it gave up the ghost , and the Anti-Masons of to day are the shadows of that ghost . AVe quote

again : " Freemasonry is Satan ' s masterpiece—a terrible snare to men . It sits this moment as a nightmare on all the moral energies of our Government and utterly paralyzes tho arm of justice . It was the mysterious snare of President Johnson and

shield for the vilest murderers of tho South . " AA hat a piece of Quixotic imagination is this !—How the nightmare must have brooded over its author ! AVe could

not desire a more defenceless windmill to tilt against ! Johnson , the Freemason President of the United States , ensnared by our Craft ! The arm of national justice paralyzed ! Southern murderers protected under the ajgis of Masonry ! The bare statement of these absurd charges is their

sufficient refutation . But there is one discovery made by the author of these tracts that overtops all ire have previously noticed , viz ., that Freemasonry is "the parent of the Ku Klux Klan . " Tho system of ratiocination by ivhich this statement is

arrived at is this : Freemasonry was the earliest of all secret societies , and therefore responsible for all that have followed it ! If there had been no Freemasons , there Avould have been no midnight masked murderers ! This reasoning may be clear

to some orders of minds—such as are found inside of asylums , and to those feebleminded Anti-Masons who , for a time , are outside , but to all men of even only ordinary intellect , the conclusion will be considered to be a prodigious non sequitur . ' ¦ "We have noticed but a few of the absurdities of these Anti-Masonic tracts , foi t ° do more would be to physic the reticle *

A Centennial Curiosity.

ad nauseam . They certainly arc a Centennial curiosity . They remind us of thc play that was intended by its author to be a tragedy , but was taken by thc audience for a comedy . AVo cannot but laugh at their statementsfroni beginning to end , for they are all the purest fiction , not one of them being even tne most remotely based upon fact .

A Londoner's Visit To A North York Dale.

A LONDONER'S VISIT TO A NORTH YORK DALE .

BY OLIVER LOUIS TWEDDELL , Author of " Old Gregory ' s Ghost , " etc . TOMLINSON was a Cockney , a fussy , dancing , smiling , dandy little Cockney . Now ivhen one says a Cockney , people

generally imagine a swell with big eyeglass , small brain , tight boots and kid gloves , who martyrs the Queen ' s English , drawls and chops his words in talking , in a manner that sets Nuttall at defiance , and would almost have made Dr . Johnson

taken fits at the degeneration of the age . Now Tomlinson , be it understood , was not a Cockney of this sort . No , no . No man spoke better English than Mr . Tomlinson , and , though by no means a vain man , if there was one thing more than another that he prided himself upon , it

was on his superior intimacy with Lindlay Murray . But I am not going to descant on the merits and demerits of Mr . Tomlinson , though he had , of course , his share of both . I am merely going to relate a small adventure which occurred to him , and it

came about as follows . Mr . Tomlinson had just come into the possession of a nice sum of money , by the death of a distant relation , whose sole heir he proved to be , and he naturall y wished to turn his newly acquired capital

to good account . It struck him that land would be the safest investment , and seeing by the newspapers that a small estate , with good fishing and shooting , was advertised for sale , p leasantly situated in one of those

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