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  • April 1, 1857
  • Page 22
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, April 1, 1857: Page 22

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    Article COEEESPONBEiOE. ← Page 5 of 5
Page 22

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

Coeeesponbeioe.

require . Remember , to help thepoor , clothe the naked , and feed the hungry , is our peculiar dutyas Masons , and rest assured there are no better means at our disposal thai ! the formation of Benevolent Funds . —I am , Dear Sir and Brother , 11 , City Terrace , City Road . Henry A . Isaacs , P . M . No . 247 .

MASONIC hospitality ; TO THE EDITOR OF THE FBEEMASONS * MAGAZINE AND MASONIC MIRROR . Dear Sir and Brother , —On Tuesday the l <) th March , being in town , I wen intending to visit the Canonbury Lodge , 955 , according to Book , of Constitutions ( page 72 , article A ) . Having put aside business matters with that object , changed , my dress to " Masonic full dress , " and gone a distance above a mile , I was somewhat surprised

on presenting myself to be kept on the landing for about ten minutes , without being allowed even to see inside the convenient room . " After which a Brother came to me , to whom I showed a bundle of certificates from E . A . P . upwards to the R . A ., K . T ., R * J < , < fec . ; when I was asked , first , " If I knew any Brother there , " and having replied that I was not aware I did , I was then asked , " What was my object in visiting them ? " and " if I wished to dine with them ? " I felt

somewhat grieved at such questions , but contented myself with saying , "I wished simply to see their working f when I was told their business was over , although I knew , from certain matters known to Masons , they were installing their W . M . elect . The Brother then retired into the " sanctum sanctorum" which I before alluded to , without even wishing me good night , inviting me to stay , or even the slightest courtesy due from one gentleman to another , much less from a Mason to one of his Brethren .

As we do not manage things after this fashion in Lancashire , perhaps by it being made known through the Magazine , the Brethren from the N . S . E . and W . will spare themselves the trouble of going to the Canonbury Tavern until the Canonbury Lodge say in a like manner that they do not object to receive visitors from the country or elsewhere . —I am , dear Sir and Brother , Yours Fraternally , Manchester , March 7 , 1857 . A Past Master , R . A ., K . T . R > J « , & c .

" The Eire Never Dies Out . "—A venerable Mason , upwards of eighty years of age , Bro . Hosford , of West Poulteney , Y . T ., in forwarding his subscription to a Masonic charity in Philadelphia , says , in a letter enclosing the same : ¦—"I am in ray fiftieth year of Masonry ; I am old , and cannot hear the word , or see the signs , but I can yet feel the true grip of Masonry . " How significant of the beauty and durability of Masonic teachings ! Let the senses lose

thenpowers and die out , as age conies on , so that we can hear no more the sounds that were once so welcome to the Masonic ear ; let the eyes grow dim , so that we can no longer look upon signs and symbols , once so grateful to the Mason ' s eye ; yet the grip , even until the life blood is frozen in the veins by the icy touch of death , remains with us all , until the last nerve is shattered , and we have passed over the valley . r J > uly , " the lire never goes out , " aged Brother ; our hand is in thine , even while we write this , in as pure a commnnion as men ever knew .

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1857-04-01, Page 22” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 13 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/frm_01041857/page/22/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
ELECTION OF GRAND MASTER. Article 1
THE CANADAS. Article 2
THE EIGHT OF REPORTING IN GRAND LODGE. Article 3
NOTICE OF GRAND LODGE BUISNESS. Article 5
THE CANADIAN MOVEMENT. Article 5
THE QUARRYMAN OF ST. POINT. Article 15
REVIEWS OF NEW BOOKS. Article 16
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 18
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 23
METROPOLITAN. Article 40
PROVINCIAL. Article 51
ROYAL ARCH. Article 59
KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. Article 63
THE HIGH GRADES. Article 68
MARK MASONRY. Article 68
SCOTLAND. Article 69
COLONIAL Article 75
INDIA Article 79
MASONIC FESTIVITIES Article 80
SUMMARY OF NEWS FOR MARCH Article 83
MASONIC ARCHITECTURE. Article 89
Obituary. Article 90
NOTICE. Article 91
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Page 22

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

Coeeesponbeioe.

require . Remember , to help thepoor , clothe the naked , and feed the hungry , is our peculiar dutyas Masons , and rest assured there are no better means at our disposal thai ! the formation of Benevolent Funds . —I am , Dear Sir and Brother , 11 , City Terrace , City Road . Henry A . Isaacs , P . M . No . 247 .

MASONIC hospitality ; TO THE EDITOR OF THE FBEEMASONS * MAGAZINE AND MASONIC MIRROR . Dear Sir and Brother , —On Tuesday the l <) th March , being in town , I wen intending to visit the Canonbury Lodge , 955 , according to Book , of Constitutions ( page 72 , article A ) . Having put aside business matters with that object , changed , my dress to " Masonic full dress , " and gone a distance above a mile , I was somewhat surprised

on presenting myself to be kept on the landing for about ten minutes , without being allowed even to see inside the convenient room . " After which a Brother came to me , to whom I showed a bundle of certificates from E . A . P . upwards to the R . A ., K . T ., R * J < , < fec . ; when I was asked , first , " If I knew any Brother there , " and having replied that I was not aware I did , I was then asked , " What was my object in visiting them ? " and " if I wished to dine with them ? " I felt

somewhat grieved at such questions , but contented myself with saying , "I wished simply to see their working f when I was told their business was over , although I knew , from certain matters known to Masons , they were installing their W . M . elect . The Brother then retired into the " sanctum sanctorum" which I before alluded to , without even wishing me good night , inviting me to stay , or even the slightest courtesy due from one gentleman to another , much less from a Mason to one of his Brethren .

As we do not manage things after this fashion in Lancashire , perhaps by it being made known through the Magazine , the Brethren from the N . S . E . and W . will spare themselves the trouble of going to the Canonbury Tavern until the Canonbury Lodge say in a like manner that they do not object to receive visitors from the country or elsewhere . —I am , dear Sir and Brother , Yours Fraternally , Manchester , March 7 , 1857 . A Past Master , R . A ., K . T . R > J « , & c .

" The Eire Never Dies Out . "—A venerable Mason , upwards of eighty years of age , Bro . Hosford , of West Poulteney , Y . T ., in forwarding his subscription to a Masonic charity in Philadelphia , says , in a letter enclosing the same : ¦—"I am in ray fiftieth year of Masonry ; I am old , and cannot hear the word , or see the signs , but I can yet feel the true grip of Masonry . " How significant of the beauty and durability of Masonic teachings ! Let the senses lose

thenpowers and die out , as age conies on , so that we can hear no more the sounds that were once so welcome to the Masonic ear ; let the eyes grow dim , so that we can no longer look upon signs and symbols , once so grateful to the Mason ' s eye ; yet the grip , even until the life blood is frozen in the veins by the icy touch of death , remains with us all , until the last nerve is shattered , and we have passed over the valley . r J > uly , " the lire never goes out , " aged Brother ; our hand is in thine , even while we write this , in as pure a commnnion as men ever knew .

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