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  • The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine
  • Feb. 1, 1856
  • Page 35
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, Feb. 1, 1856: Page 35

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Page 35

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Untitled Article

The officers appointed were Bros . J . H . WTiarton , S . W . ; Bishop , J . W . ; Barrett , S . D .: Christy , J . D . ; G . K . Greville , I . G .

Lodge of Industry ( No . 219 ) . —On the 22 nd of January , the Brethren of this highly respectable and excellently worked Lodge met together at Bro . Quelch ' s , Dick's Hotel , Pleet-street . Among those present we observed Bros . Suter , Orelli , Irvine , Haines , Haynes , Guyde , Polden , Saunders , Howard , Quelch , Carpenter , Dunn , and Lescombe . The visitors were Bros . John MottThearle , Goring , E . Martin , Newman , Hay day , Piatt , Bigg , Cooper , Webster , and Marston . Bro . Suter , having been installed as W . M ., appointed as his officers Bros . Orelli ,

S . W . ; Irvine , J . W . ; Guyde , S . D . ; Haines , J . D . ; Polden , I . G . ; Bro . Lescombe was again appointed Treas ., and Bro . Carpenter Sec . — -the W . M . prefacing the appointments by very appropriate encomiums on the fitness exhibited by each of the Brethren appointed to the various offices , aptly observing , in conclusion , that however they might manage elsewhere as regarded the appointments , he believed that in this case he had put the right men in the right places . At the close of the business of the evening , banquet was announced .

And we may here be excused for tarrying in our account to notice the very elegant , spacious , and well-furnished Lodge room the Brethren of the Industry possess at Bro . Quelch's . We have seldom met with one better adapted for Lodge purposes . The furniture is very beautiful . The W . M . ' s chair , with its elegant pillars , is a chef-d ' oeuvre . If the place wanted other associations we have it in the circumtance that we are on the spot consecrated to the memory of the worthies of a by-gone time , and from the back window of Bro . Quelch's we see where Dr .

Johnson dwelt , and poor Goldsmith and Sir William Black stone wrote ; and from the front we see the house ( now occupied by Bro . John Mott Thearle , the Masonic jeweller ) , where gentle Izaak Walton lived and kept a shop , and wrote his immortal work on the art of angling . Here between the two entrances of the temple is classic ground , and our minds naturally revert to the armorial emblems over each gate , the one a winged horse and the other a lamb . And for the delectation of our legal Brethren we introduce this consideration on the aforesaid emblems :

As thro' the Templar ' s courts you go , The Lamb and Horse displayed , The emblematic figures show The merits of their trade . That clients may infer from hence , How just is their profession , The Lamb denotes their innocence , The Horse their expedition .

Oh , happy Britain ! happy isle ! Let foreign nations say—Here you get justice without guile , And law without delay . Or should these emblems be thus sung of ? Unhappy man , these courts forego , Nor trust those cunning elves ; The artful emblems only show Their clients—not themselves !

These all are tricks , these all are shams , With which they mean to cheat ye ; But have a care , for you ' re the lambs , And they the wolves that eat yo . Nor let the plea of no delay To those their courts misguide ye , For you ' re the prancing horse , and they The jockeys that w ould rido ye .

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1856-02-01, Page 35” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 21 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/frm_01021856/page/35/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
ON THE MYSTERIES OF THE EARLY AGES AS CONNECTED WIRH RELIGION. Article 1
TRIBUTE TO FREEMASONRY. Article 6
A PAGE FROM RUSSIAN HISTORY. Article 7
CARISBROOKE CASTLE, ISLE OE WIGHT. Article 16
LONELINESS. Article 19
NOTES OF A YACHT'S CRUISE TO BALAKLAVA. Article 20
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 25
THE MASONIC MIKROR. Article 28
THE ROYAL FREEMASONS' GIRLS' SCHOOL. Article 28
METROPOLITAN. Article 29
INSTRUCTION Article 39
PROVINCIAL Article 41
ISLE OF WIGHT. Article 45
ROYAL ARCH. Article 63
THE ANCIENT AND ACCEPTED RITE. Article 65
SCOTLAND. Article 66
IRELAND. Article 70
COLONIAL. Article 71
INDIA. Article 73
AMERICA. Article 75
GERMANY. Article 75
SUMMARY OE NEWS FOR JANUARY Article 76
obituary. Article 78
BRO. JOHN FOWLER Article 78
BRO. RICHARD PEAR BLAKE. Article 78
NOTICE. Article 80
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 80
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Untitled Article

The officers appointed were Bros . J . H . WTiarton , S . W . ; Bishop , J . W . ; Barrett , S . D .: Christy , J . D . ; G . K . Greville , I . G .

Lodge of Industry ( No . 219 ) . —On the 22 nd of January , the Brethren of this highly respectable and excellently worked Lodge met together at Bro . Quelch ' s , Dick's Hotel , Pleet-street . Among those present we observed Bros . Suter , Orelli , Irvine , Haines , Haynes , Guyde , Polden , Saunders , Howard , Quelch , Carpenter , Dunn , and Lescombe . The visitors were Bros . John MottThearle , Goring , E . Martin , Newman , Hay day , Piatt , Bigg , Cooper , Webster , and Marston . Bro . Suter , having been installed as W . M ., appointed as his officers Bros . Orelli ,

S . W . ; Irvine , J . W . ; Guyde , S . D . ; Haines , J . D . ; Polden , I . G . ; Bro . Lescombe was again appointed Treas ., and Bro . Carpenter Sec . — -the W . M . prefacing the appointments by very appropriate encomiums on the fitness exhibited by each of the Brethren appointed to the various offices , aptly observing , in conclusion , that however they might manage elsewhere as regarded the appointments , he believed that in this case he had put the right men in the right places . At the close of the business of the evening , banquet was announced .

And we may here be excused for tarrying in our account to notice the very elegant , spacious , and well-furnished Lodge room the Brethren of the Industry possess at Bro . Quelch's . We have seldom met with one better adapted for Lodge purposes . The furniture is very beautiful . The W . M . ' s chair , with its elegant pillars , is a chef-d ' oeuvre . If the place wanted other associations we have it in the circumtance that we are on the spot consecrated to the memory of the worthies of a by-gone time , and from the back window of Bro . Quelch's we see where Dr .

Johnson dwelt , and poor Goldsmith and Sir William Black stone wrote ; and from the front we see the house ( now occupied by Bro . John Mott Thearle , the Masonic jeweller ) , where gentle Izaak Walton lived and kept a shop , and wrote his immortal work on the art of angling . Here between the two entrances of the temple is classic ground , and our minds naturally revert to the armorial emblems over each gate , the one a winged horse and the other a lamb . And for the delectation of our legal Brethren we introduce this consideration on the aforesaid emblems :

As thro' the Templar ' s courts you go , The Lamb and Horse displayed , The emblematic figures show The merits of their trade . That clients may infer from hence , How just is their profession , The Lamb denotes their innocence , The Horse their expedition .

Oh , happy Britain ! happy isle ! Let foreign nations say—Here you get justice without guile , And law without delay . Or should these emblems be thus sung of ? Unhappy man , these courts forego , Nor trust those cunning elves ; The artful emblems only show Their clients—not themselves !

These all are tricks , these all are shams , With which they mean to cheat ye ; But have a care , for you ' re the lambs , And they the wolves that eat yo . Nor let the plea of no delay To those their courts misguide ye , For you ' re the prancing horse , and they The jockeys that w ould rido ye .

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