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Article LITTLE BRITAIN. ← Page 5 of 5 Article OUR GRAND BROTHERHOOD. Page 1 of 3 →
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Little Britain.
It would clo one ' s heart good to hear on a club-night tho shouts of merriment , the snatches of song , and IIOAV and then the choral bursts of half-a-dozon discordant voices , Avhich issue from this jovial mansion . At such times the street is lined with listeners , who enjoy a delight equal to that of gazing into a confectioner ' s window , or snuffing up the steams of a cook-shop . ( To be concluded . )
Our Grand Brotherhood.
OUR GRAND BROTHERHOOD .
BY BlfO . T . BURDETT YEOMAN , I'M . 1160 . AFTER a man has been initiated into Freemasonry , and years have rolled over his head and Masonic career , as a rule he finds the longer he lives in it ancl up to it as a Craftsman , the more sweet to him must be the honour
and dignity of having become a member of the Royal Craft . After some sixteen years' connection ivith the noble order ancl the brotherhood generally as a bocly , I knoiv of nothing in my experience of some sixty years that has given me so much pleasure ancl gratification , so much delight , so many pleasant and diversified hours of real social pastime , as ivell as intellectual and manly companionship , as to that of the time passed in our temples . Such has been one of undoubted ancl unsurpassable gratification both to my mind and my bocly . Here I have met with men of rare talents ; scholars ancl
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.
Little Britain.
It would clo one ' s heart good to hear on a club-night tho shouts of merriment , the snatches of song , and IIOAV and then the choral bursts of half-a-dozon discordant voices , Avhich issue from this jovial mansion . At such times the street is lined with listeners , who enjoy a delight equal to that of gazing into a confectioner ' s window , or snuffing up the steams of a cook-shop . ( To be concluded . )
Our Grand Brotherhood.
OUR GRAND BROTHERHOOD .
BY BlfO . T . BURDETT YEOMAN , I'M . 1160 . AFTER a man has been initiated into Freemasonry , and years have rolled over his head and Masonic career , as a rule he finds the longer he lives in it ancl up to it as a Craftsman , the more sweet to him must be the honour
and dignity of having become a member of the Royal Craft . After some sixteen years' connection ivith the noble order ancl the brotherhood generally as a bocly , I knoiv of nothing in my experience of some sixty years that has given me so much pleasure ancl gratification , so much delight , so many pleasant and diversified hours of real social pastime , as ivell as intellectual and manly companionship , as to that of the time passed in our temples . Such has been one of undoubted ancl unsurpassable gratification both to my mind and my bocly . Here I have met with men of rare talents ; scholars ancl