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  • The Masonic Magazine
  • July 1, 1876
  • Page 7
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The Masonic Magazine, July 1, 1876: Page 7

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    Article Monthly Masonic Summary. Page 1 of 1
    Article Monthly Masonic Summary. Page 1 of 1
    Article SONNET. Page 1 of 1
Page 7

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

Monthly Masonic Summary.

Monthly Masonic Summary .

WE have not a great deal of Masonic news to mention or comment upon . The Quarterly Communication lias past and gone , and , to us , with no satisfactory result .

\ Bro . John Havers , P . G . W ., well-known for his many and great services to our Order for long years , proposed to make a grateful recognition of our cherished Grand Master ' s safe return home by a grant ot £ 2 , 000 to the Eestoration Funds of St . Paul ' s and St . Alban ' s Cathedral . He

selected these two special objects because connected with our Masonic annals and because they pointed to the operative and speculative sides of our older Masonic history . This reasonable proposal was met by an appeal " ad hominem " as if it were a

sectarian and denominational grant , and by an urgent invocation of that theory of Masonic donation of funds onl y for Masonic purposes—a rule which , though no doubt true in the main , has its exception , as most rules on earth have . On these two

grounds apparently a majority of Grand Lodge rejected the proposal , though a committee , it was agreed , should be appointed to consider in what way such a recognition should be made . We , as we said before regret the rejection of the oriinal

, g proposition of Bro . Havers , feeling that Grand Lodge has lost a good opportunit y , u even it went a little out of its usual routine , of doing a pleasant thine ; in a graceful way . Some brethren seemed to be apprehensive that

the matter took a denominational iorni— -a very great mistake , as it in no way urn' aUtl ot , leratook ll P the old story , that Uiant y begins at home . " Anyhow , on one ground or another , a majorit y objected to the original proportion and supported the amendment , and s ° " cadit qiuestic . " We feel that in September it will be all too late to move any

Monthly Masonic Summary.

further in the matter , and Grand Lodge will probablycontent itself withrecording its grateful recognition of the happy return of our Grand Master to England and the active duties of Freemasonry . The increase of our Order continues , and have

we constantl y to report consecrations of New Lod ges and Chapters . We are afraid , however , that there is another side to this pleasing picturenamely , too much of a seeking of Masonic materia ] , respectability and prosperityfor what it can give us , for what we ourselves can obtain from it for ourselves in a darker hour on a rainy day .

Sonnet.

SONNET .

BY BRO . KEY . H . GORDON . ( For the Masonic Magazine . ) What eye—what least observant

eye but scans A dark cloud looming in the eastern sk y , Which still appears moreominouslynigh ; Yea , half of the wide orient heav ' n now spans , Presaging wrath ?—Ye Brother Ottomans

Of the Masonic heav ' n compacted tie , If ye would live , restore full speedily A land—a sacred land , which is not man ' s , But God ' s—to Brother Hebrew Masons , ' who Your surest friends will , in return , be found

; Friends no less mystic-bound to usto you—Than by an instinct , shared the whole world round , 'Gainst that bleak realm—that dark , Cimmerian Clime In which mistaken law , —our Craft ' s a crime .

“The Masonic Magazine: 1876-07-01, Page 7” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 29 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01071876/page/7/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
TO OUR READERS. Article 2
INDEX. Article 4
Monthly Masonic Summary. Article 7
SONNET. Article 7
A PCEAN. Article 8
SOCIAL PROBLEMS AND THEIR PEACEFUL SOLUTION. Article 10
THE BROKEN TESSERA. Article 13
THE WOMEN OF OUR TIME. Article 14
A WORD FOR OUR BOYS. Article 17
SONNET. Article 19
TRIADS IN MASONRY. Article 19
NOTES ON THE OLD MINUTE BOOKS OF THE BRITISH UNION LODGE, No. 114, IPSWICH. A.D. 1762. Article 20
AN ITALIAN COUNT. Article 24
WHISTLE DOWN THE BRAKES. Article 28
ZOROASTRIANISM AND FREEMASONRY. Article 28
THE OLD FISHER'S TALE. Article 32
FAIRY TALES UTILISED FOR, THE NEW GENERATION. Article 32
SPRING. Article 35
THE EDUCATION OF SOCIETY. Article 35
THE ORIGIN AND REFERENCES OF THE HERMESIAN SPURIOUS FREEMASONRY. Article 37
Untitled Article 41
Our Archaeological Corner. Article 42
THE TROAD. Article 43
A STRICKEN HEART. Article 47
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE AND ART. Article 47
THE NEW SCHOOL DIRECTOR. Article 49
REVIEW. Article 50
MASONIC CYCLOPAEDIA. Article 54
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Page 7

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

Monthly Masonic Summary.

Monthly Masonic Summary .

WE have not a great deal of Masonic news to mention or comment upon . The Quarterly Communication lias past and gone , and , to us , with no satisfactory result .

\ Bro . John Havers , P . G . W ., well-known for his many and great services to our Order for long years , proposed to make a grateful recognition of our cherished Grand Master ' s safe return home by a grant ot £ 2 , 000 to the Eestoration Funds of St . Paul ' s and St . Alban ' s Cathedral . He

selected these two special objects because connected with our Masonic annals and because they pointed to the operative and speculative sides of our older Masonic history . This reasonable proposal was met by an appeal " ad hominem " as if it were a

sectarian and denominational grant , and by an urgent invocation of that theory of Masonic donation of funds onl y for Masonic purposes—a rule which , though no doubt true in the main , has its exception , as most rules on earth have . On these two

grounds apparently a majority of Grand Lodge rejected the proposal , though a committee , it was agreed , should be appointed to consider in what way such a recognition should be made . We , as we said before regret the rejection of the oriinal

, g proposition of Bro . Havers , feeling that Grand Lodge has lost a good opportunit y , u even it went a little out of its usual routine , of doing a pleasant thine ; in a graceful way . Some brethren seemed to be apprehensive that

the matter took a denominational iorni— -a very great mistake , as it in no way urn' aUtl ot , leratook ll P the old story , that Uiant y begins at home . " Anyhow , on one ground or another , a majorit y objected to the original proportion and supported the amendment , and s ° " cadit qiuestic . " We feel that in September it will be all too late to move any

Monthly Masonic Summary.

further in the matter , and Grand Lodge will probablycontent itself withrecording its grateful recognition of the happy return of our Grand Master to England and the active duties of Freemasonry . The increase of our Order continues , and have

we constantl y to report consecrations of New Lod ges and Chapters . We are afraid , however , that there is another side to this pleasing picturenamely , too much of a seeking of Masonic materia ] , respectability and prosperityfor what it can give us , for what we ourselves can obtain from it for ourselves in a darker hour on a rainy day .

Sonnet.

SONNET .

BY BRO . KEY . H . GORDON . ( For the Masonic Magazine . ) What eye—what least observant

eye but scans A dark cloud looming in the eastern sk y , Which still appears moreominouslynigh ; Yea , half of the wide orient heav ' n now spans , Presaging wrath ?—Ye Brother Ottomans

Of the Masonic heav ' n compacted tie , If ye would live , restore full speedily A land—a sacred land , which is not man ' s , But God ' s—to Brother Hebrew Masons , ' who Your surest friends will , in return , be found

; Friends no less mystic-bound to usto you—Than by an instinct , shared the whole world round , 'Gainst that bleak realm—that dark , Cimmerian Clime In which mistaken law , —our Craft ' s a crime .

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