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  • The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine
  • March 1, 1855
  • Page 11
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, March 1, 1855: Page 11

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Page 11

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

Untitled Article

And there is no reason why our food should be as filthy as physic ; nature abhors the idea and sets about making it nice ; but our defects are such , that if each man fed alone instinct would probably outweigh judgment , and this nicety would occasion excess . It was therefore no common wisdom that first taught men to eat and drink in company , imposing , as they grew in knowledge and morality ,

such checks as their better nature suggested , which mutual presence tended to perpetuate and enforce . In this manner civilization has arrested grossness of feeding and bestiality in drink ; but the accumulated experience of ages has certified the real blessings of hospitality and good cheer . Dinners , feasts , banquets , suppers , are , and will be , till man shall be rarified into an ethereal being without a stomach .

There is no need to ransack old . and new book lore to testify the fact ; literature teems with it . To-day we endorse it , for that tangled web of wisdom and folly , called society , is mainly knit together by " parties , " and the friendship which grows in the parlour has its roots down in the kitchen . Passing by generalities ,, however , let us

take the hard fact of modern times , unallured by beauty of form and colour , —by the treasures of world-renowned art , and the fairest loveliness of flower and tree . Human nature at the Crystal Palace is busiest and happiest , alas ! in the cookshop , to the lasting grief of artists and illuminati , and the glory of cooks and

caterers—The why is clear as way to parish church " — having dined , the wolf within is soothed into fawning docility , —the most ferocious Cerberus gives in before a dainty sop . " When we have stuffed These pipes and these conveyances of our blood With wine and feeding—we have suppler souls . "

Our ancient Brethren knew all this . Their universal scheme grasped whatsoever tended to unite our species , while it discarded all discordant elements , and we have shown how in the world , without eating and drinking , nothing else has this uniting tendency . And have we exhausted the subject , have we not left untouched our aldermen's revels , our ministerial full-dress dinners and white-bait

" finish , " our charity feastings and political holocausts ; to say nothing of wedding breakfasts , christening dinners , missionary teas , and suppers from Ghmter ' s ? Here , then , is a point of table-land whence we can survey our position with certainty . The K and F Degree is an ingredient of Preemasonry , founded on a just comprehension of the necessities of

our humanity ; it is , nevertheless , so properly guarded , that any undue attachment to this , the grossest part of our system , cannot be indulged iii without detracting seriously from the excellence and purity of our Masonic character . Some , with a shrug of the shoulders , tell us that , without its good feeding , Freemasonry would long ago have evaporated ; others affirm that its Truth lies so deep ,

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1855-03-01, Page 11” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 14 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_01031855/page/11/.
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Title Category Page
CONTINENTAL FBEEMASONRY. Article 4
A DISSERTATION ON THE K AND F DEGREE. Article 10
THE LAST RELIC. Article 13
SOMETHING CONCERNING THE TRADESCANTS. Article 15
THE REPORTED ABDUCTION AND DEATH OF MORGAN, IN THE UNITED STATES. Article 21
MASONIC CURIOSITIES. Article 19
SOME REASONS FOR OUR BEING A SECRET ORDER. Article 23
A CANADIAN GRAND LODGE. Article 24
TO THE EDITOR OF THE FKEEMASONS' MONTHLY MAGAZINE. Article 33
MASONIC CHARITIES. Article 34
MASONIC INTELLIGENCE Article 34
FREEMASONRY. Article 25
THE PATBIOTIC FUND. Article 1
HOPE. Article 30
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 31
THE ANCIENT AND ACCEPTED RITE. Article 35
TO THE EDITOR OF THE FREEMASONS' MONTHLY MAGAZINE. Article 32
TO THE EDITOR OF THE FREEMASONS' MONTHLY MAGAZINE. Article 32
PATRIOTIC FUND. Article 35
METROPOLITAN. Article 36
PROVINCIAL Article 42
INDIA. Article 49
ROYAL ARCH. Article 47
SCOTLAND. Article 48
AMERICA. Article 49
COLONIAL. Article 52
KNIGHT TEMPLARISM. Article 55
METROPOLITAN LODGE MEETINGS FOR THE MONTH OF MARCH. Article 56
LODGES OF INSTRUCTION. Article 58
CHAPTERS OF INSTRUCTION Article 59
Obituary Article 60
NOTICES TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 62
ERRATUM. Article 64
Untitled Ad Ad 9
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Untitled Article

And there is no reason why our food should be as filthy as physic ; nature abhors the idea and sets about making it nice ; but our defects are such , that if each man fed alone instinct would probably outweigh judgment , and this nicety would occasion excess . It was therefore no common wisdom that first taught men to eat and drink in company , imposing , as they grew in knowledge and morality ,

such checks as their better nature suggested , which mutual presence tended to perpetuate and enforce . In this manner civilization has arrested grossness of feeding and bestiality in drink ; but the accumulated experience of ages has certified the real blessings of hospitality and good cheer . Dinners , feasts , banquets , suppers , are , and will be , till man shall be rarified into an ethereal being without a stomach .

There is no need to ransack old . and new book lore to testify the fact ; literature teems with it . To-day we endorse it , for that tangled web of wisdom and folly , called society , is mainly knit together by " parties , " and the friendship which grows in the parlour has its roots down in the kitchen . Passing by generalities ,, however , let us

take the hard fact of modern times , unallured by beauty of form and colour , —by the treasures of world-renowned art , and the fairest loveliness of flower and tree . Human nature at the Crystal Palace is busiest and happiest , alas ! in the cookshop , to the lasting grief of artists and illuminati , and the glory of cooks and

caterers—The why is clear as way to parish church " — having dined , the wolf within is soothed into fawning docility , —the most ferocious Cerberus gives in before a dainty sop . " When we have stuffed These pipes and these conveyances of our blood With wine and feeding—we have suppler souls . "

Our ancient Brethren knew all this . Their universal scheme grasped whatsoever tended to unite our species , while it discarded all discordant elements , and we have shown how in the world , without eating and drinking , nothing else has this uniting tendency . And have we exhausted the subject , have we not left untouched our aldermen's revels , our ministerial full-dress dinners and white-bait

" finish , " our charity feastings and political holocausts ; to say nothing of wedding breakfasts , christening dinners , missionary teas , and suppers from Ghmter ' s ? Here , then , is a point of table-land whence we can survey our position with certainty . The K and F Degree is an ingredient of Preemasonry , founded on a just comprehension of the necessities of

our humanity ; it is , nevertheless , so properly guarded , that any undue attachment to this , the grossest part of our system , cannot be indulged iii without detracting seriously from the excellence and purity of our Masonic character . Some , with a shrug of the shoulders , tell us that , without its good feeding , Freemasonry would long ago have evaporated ; others affirm that its Truth lies so deep ,

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