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  • The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine
  • Aug. 7, 1869
  • Page 11
  • INELIGIBILITY OF CANDIDATES FOR FREEMASONRY.
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, Aug. 7, 1869: Page 11

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    Article THE ROYAL MASONIC INSTITUTION FOR BOYS. ← Page 2 of 2
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The Royal Masonic Institution For Boys.

zine of the 24 th ult . He says , " With the experience I have of the past and present of this School , I can honestly and confidently express my conviction that there is no school in the land which for educational position surpasses the Royal Masonic Institution for Boys ; " and he then mentions this fact"Harry William

, Wildrnan having been placed absolutely first of 1 , 165 junior candidates at the last Cambridge examination . '' Sir , these remarks coming from so high an authority and so impartial a judge as Bro . Dr . Goodwin , the brethren may justly be proud of their noble School . Again , Bro . the Rev . J . E . Cox at this examination ,

in speaking of the Secretary , Bro . P . Binckes said , " If ever it was so , he is the right man in the right place , " and your correspondent hopes it will please the Great Architect of the Universe to spare him for many years to make his eloquent appeal on behalf of this School , and fill , as he now so ably does , the distinguished position of Secretary , But nisi Dommus

frustra . And I understand , Sir , there are offers from several clergymen who are ready to advocate this noble charity , and to prove from the pulpit that its tenets and principles are worthy of the support of the Craft . Shall this happy omen be lost upon us ? Rather let us accept the presage , and by prompt decision , firmness of purposeunity of actionandabove all

, , , , with the blessed spirit of charity itself , let us hail it as the auspicium melioris cevi . Lastly , let every Mason act as if success depended upon his own exertions , and that a total failure may attend his own indifference . Preemasons , will you , can you deny the aid it is in your power to bestow ?

" The widow ' s tear , the orphan ' s cry , All wants our ready hands supply , As far as power is given . The naked clothe , the prisoners free . These are thy works , sweet Charity , Revealed to us from heaven !" Yours fraternally , Walbrook . C . Hosaoon .

Ineligibility Of Candidates For Freemasonry.

INELIGIBILITY OF CANDIDATES FOR FREEMASONRY .

10 THB EDITOR OF THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE AMD MASONIC MIRROR . Dear Sir and Brother , — -A more puerile and vainglorious letter on the subject of the Lame Man , nor a lamer justification of a most arrant innovation , I cannot conceive than that of Bro . W . P . Buchan in the Mirror of the 17 th ult . at leastaccording to my

, , training and obligation . It must have startled the majority of your readers to know that all old things had passed away and a new style began . The fact is , the transaction to which it refers ought to be repudiated and denounced by the Craftsmen of Glasgow , as prejudicial and slanderous to the integrity of

Masonic promulgation therein . A lodge in that city , of which I am a member , refused an application a month ago of a person minus the left hand , because the majority of the brethren present could not on soul and conscience bear witness to , nor officiate at the initiation . Bro . B . ' s lod havinbeen notified of

ge g this refusal , he writes you stating that he is proud to say that he has discovered a process ( one , I suppose , of transubstantiation , which he ought to patent ) , whereby it appears all qualms of conscience can be quieted , and that he glories in having accepted

Ineligibility Of Candidates For Freemasonry.

( adopted should have been the word ) an entrant deprived of his right arm , and adds , that although he had wanted his legs , but could have hobbled up to the altar on his stumps , he would have made him ; good moral character , according to his creed , being the only requisite for admittance . Bro . B . had better

begin to initiate the deaf , dumb , and blind , and he will then have nigh run the circle of the physical disqualifications of this once pure Order . Pie seems very solicitous about the returned remnants of war , who , having done their best to slay their fellow-man , and having got their quietus at the point of steel ,

get home minus an eye or a limb , plus a pension and some medals . Por such dilapidated forms he would make the lodge-room a receptacle , perhaps on the principle of the lion lying down with the lamb . Somehow he must have been dreaming of that fighting old brick in Chevy Chasewho was " A man of

, doleful dumps , who when his legs were carried off , he fought upon his stumps . " Warriors and sailors to enjoy the practical utility and the amenities of this Order should enter its lists

before campaigning or navigating ; it is not time to seek enrolment in a sick or benefit society when calamity has overtaken us ; there is an acceptable season for all things , and , as regards our ancient society , a man should ask admission there when he is in the full vigour of all his mental and physical energies , otherwise live contented outside its pale . It is a question

with myself and others whether this " new light" of Bro . B . ' s amounts to a' Masonic fraud : at all events , we fear " Virtue hath gone out of him , and that his zeal hath eaten him up . " Were I in his shoes , I should reproach myself with the guilt of perjury , and liable to a penalty ; for , if he can be accommodated with absolution , it is more than I can . But what is it some men dare not do ? Yerily they are a law and a wall of sufficiency unto themselves ! In Burn ' s poem , Death says of Dr . Hornbook : — ¦

" He ' s grown sae well acquaint wf Buchan , An' ither chaps , The weans haud out their fingers laughin ' An' pouk my hips . " I doubt , however , if this great discovery continues to be acted on , that there will be scarce a hip sometimes to pouk ; and that the finger of derision will be pointed at

the province of Glasgow with accompanying epithets . I hope , therefore , Bro . Editor , that some of your best authorities will read our wayward disciples a salutary lesson . I am glad to observe by your leading article that you are alive to the want of uniformity in lodge working . May you succeed in effecting improvement , and by all means an assimilation in the terms of the

O . B . throughout the three Kingdoms , and the Colonies , so that it may not be left to evasion , addition , or diminution at the caprice of individuals , as I am assured from experience that the absence of enforced uniformity is prolific of much discord . Yours fraternally , August 2 , 1869 . W . L .

Mr . THORNTON , the British minister , has announced to the American Government that an International Exhibition of the preducts of workmen ' s labour is to be held in London in 1870 , and that he has been instructed to make it known to the people of the United States . The Government has accordingly communicated the fact to the public , and from the announcements already made it is considered probable that the American contributions to the Exhibition will ba extensive .

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1869-08-07, Page 11” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 22 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_07081869/page/11/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
FROM LABOUR TO REFRESHMENT. Article 1
THE PRAYERS OF THE CRAFT. Article 2
THE TOPOGRAPHY OF JERUSALEM. Article 4
BRIEF NARRATIVE OF THE PROCEEDINGS OF THE PALESTINE EXPLORATION FUND. Article 5
BIBLES AND OTHER, EARLY PRINTED BOOKS. Article 6
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 7
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 10
THE ROYAL MASONIC INSTITUTION FOR BOYS. Article 10
INELIGIBILITY OF CANDIDATES FOR FREEMASONRY. Article 11
MASONIC MEMS Article 12
GRAND LODGE. Article 12
METROPOLITAN. Article 12
PROVINCIAL. Article 12
SCOTLAND. Article 13
EDINBURGH. Article 13
CANADA. Article 13
ROYAL ARCH. Article 16
REASONS FOR MASONIC SECRECY. Article 16
LODGES OF INSTRUCTION Article 17
RHETORIC OF MASONRY. Article 17
WHAT DOES FREEMASONRY TEACH? Article 17
Obituary. Article 18
LITERATURE, SCIENCE, MUSIC, DRAMA, AND THE FINE ARTS. Article 18
Poetry. Article 19
LIST OF LODGE, &c., MEETINGS FOR WEEK ENDING 14TH AUGUST, 1869. Article 20
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 20
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

The Royal Masonic Institution For Boys.

zine of the 24 th ult . He says , " With the experience I have of the past and present of this School , I can honestly and confidently express my conviction that there is no school in the land which for educational position surpasses the Royal Masonic Institution for Boys ; " and he then mentions this fact"Harry William

, Wildrnan having been placed absolutely first of 1 , 165 junior candidates at the last Cambridge examination . '' Sir , these remarks coming from so high an authority and so impartial a judge as Bro . Dr . Goodwin , the brethren may justly be proud of their noble School . Again , Bro . the Rev . J . E . Cox at this examination ,

in speaking of the Secretary , Bro . P . Binckes said , " If ever it was so , he is the right man in the right place , " and your correspondent hopes it will please the Great Architect of the Universe to spare him for many years to make his eloquent appeal on behalf of this School , and fill , as he now so ably does , the distinguished position of Secretary , But nisi Dommus

frustra . And I understand , Sir , there are offers from several clergymen who are ready to advocate this noble charity , and to prove from the pulpit that its tenets and principles are worthy of the support of the Craft . Shall this happy omen be lost upon us ? Rather let us accept the presage , and by prompt decision , firmness of purposeunity of actionandabove all

, , , , with the blessed spirit of charity itself , let us hail it as the auspicium melioris cevi . Lastly , let every Mason act as if success depended upon his own exertions , and that a total failure may attend his own indifference . Preemasons , will you , can you deny the aid it is in your power to bestow ?

" The widow ' s tear , the orphan ' s cry , All wants our ready hands supply , As far as power is given . The naked clothe , the prisoners free . These are thy works , sweet Charity , Revealed to us from heaven !" Yours fraternally , Walbrook . C . Hosaoon .

Ineligibility Of Candidates For Freemasonry.

INELIGIBILITY OF CANDIDATES FOR FREEMASONRY .

10 THB EDITOR OF THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE AMD MASONIC MIRROR . Dear Sir and Brother , — -A more puerile and vainglorious letter on the subject of the Lame Man , nor a lamer justification of a most arrant innovation , I cannot conceive than that of Bro . W . P . Buchan in the Mirror of the 17 th ult . at leastaccording to my

, , training and obligation . It must have startled the majority of your readers to know that all old things had passed away and a new style began . The fact is , the transaction to which it refers ought to be repudiated and denounced by the Craftsmen of Glasgow , as prejudicial and slanderous to the integrity of

Masonic promulgation therein . A lodge in that city , of which I am a member , refused an application a month ago of a person minus the left hand , because the majority of the brethren present could not on soul and conscience bear witness to , nor officiate at the initiation . Bro . B . ' s lod havinbeen notified of

ge g this refusal , he writes you stating that he is proud to say that he has discovered a process ( one , I suppose , of transubstantiation , which he ought to patent ) , whereby it appears all qualms of conscience can be quieted , and that he glories in having accepted

Ineligibility Of Candidates For Freemasonry.

( adopted should have been the word ) an entrant deprived of his right arm , and adds , that although he had wanted his legs , but could have hobbled up to the altar on his stumps , he would have made him ; good moral character , according to his creed , being the only requisite for admittance . Bro . B . had better

begin to initiate the deaf , dumb , and blind , and he will then have nigh run the circle of the physical disqualifications of this once pure Order . Pie seems very solicitous about the returned remnants of war , who , having done their best to slay their fellow-man , and having got their quietus at the point of steel ,

get home minus an eye or a limb , plus a pension and some medals . Por such dilapidated forms he would make the lodge-room a receptacle , perhaps on the principle of the lion lying down with the lamb . Somehow he must have been dreaming of that fighting old brick in Chevy Chasewho was " A man of

, doleful dumps , who when his legs were carried off , he fought upon his stumps . " Warriors and sailors to enjoy the practical utility and the amenities of this Order should enter its lists

before campaigning or navigating ; it is not time to seek enrolment in a sick or benefit society when calamity has overtaken us ; there is an acceptable season for all things , and , as regards our ancient society , a man should ask admission there when he is in the full vigour of all his mental and physical energies , otherwise live contented outside its pale . It is a question

with myself and others whether this " new light" of Bro . B . ' s amounts to a' Masonic fraud : at all events , we fear " Virtue hath gone out of him , and that his zeal hath eaten him up . " Were I in his shoes , I should reproach myself with the guilt of perjury , and liable to a penalty ; for , if he can be accommodated with absolution , it is more than I can . But what is it some men dare not do ? Yerily they are a law and a wall of sufficiency unto themselves ! In Burn ' s poem , Death says of Dr . Hornbook : — ¦

" He ' s grown sae well acquaint wf Buchan , An' ither chaps , The weans haud out their fingers laughin ' An' pouk my hips . " I doubt , however , if this great discovery continues to be acted on , that there will be scarce a hip sometimes to pouk ; and that the finger of derision will be pointed at

the province of Glasgow with accompanying epithets . I hope , therefore , Bro . Editor , that some of your best authorities will read our wayward disciples a salutary lesson . I am glad to observe by your leading article that you are alive to the want of uniformity in lodge working . May you succeed in effecting improvement , and by all means an assimilation in the terms of the

O . B . throughout the three Kingdoms , and the Colonies , so that it may not be left to evasion , addition , or diminution at the caprice of individuals , as I am assured from experience that the absence of enforced uniformity is prolific of much discord . Yours fraternally , August 2 , 1869 . W . L .

Mr . THORNTON , the British minister , has announced to the American Government that an International Exhibition of the preducts of workmen ' s labour is to be held in London in 1870 , and that he has been instructed to make it known to the people of the United States . The Government has accordingly communicated the fact to the public , and from the announcements already made it is considered probable that the American contributions to the Exhibition will ba extensive .

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