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  • The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine
  • Nov. 7, 1868
  • Page 19
  • THE PRINCE OF WALES AND FREEMASONRY.
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, Nov. 7, 1868: Page 19

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    Article RED CROSS OF ROME AND CONSTANTINE. Page 1 of 1
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Red Cross Of Rome And Constantine.

RED CROSS OF ROME AND CONSTANTINE .

EOMAN - EAGLE CONCLAVE , ( NO . 6 ) . —On Saturday evening the 24 th ult ., a meeting of No . 6 on the Eoman Eagle Conclave of ¦ the knights oftlie Red Cross of Borne and Constantino , was held at Andertons' Hotel , Fleet-street . The chair was taken at five o ' clock precisely , by the Eminent and P . Sir Knt . William , F . H . Quilty , K . G . C ., M . P . Sovereign , Eminent Sir Knt . Henry C . Levander , M . A . being Viceroy Eusebins . Amongst the other Sir Knts . Compspresent wereWoodmanM . D-HarrisonM . D .,

, , , , , R . W . Little , P . S ., P . M ., & c , & c , G . E ., J . Brett , K . G . C ., & c , Weaver , Org ., Foulger , H . Thompson , C . B . Thompson , Ormond Perrot , Smith . The only visitor present being Sir Knt . Mayo , of the Plantagenet Conclave . The minutes of the last assembly of the conclave were read in the absence through indisposition of Sir Knt . A . A . Pendlebury , K . G . C ., read by Sir Knt . Woodman . Sir Knt . Levander was elected M . P . Sov ., Woodman

Viceroy ; Quilty , Treas ., ancl Gilbert , Sentinel . When the business had been concluded the conclave was closed with solemn prayer . The assemblage then adjourned to the banqueting hall where dinner was served in first class style . The cloth having been drawn and grace said , the M . P . S . gave "The Queen and Christian Masonry , " drunk in the usual manner observed iu the Order . The health of Lord Konlis , W . M . of the Order followed

to which the S . briefly alluded as his excellences were well known , an example of his abilities having lately been shown at the recent resuscitation of the Order . The toast was drunk with honours . The S . called upon the conclave to rise and drink to

the health of Sir Frank Martin William , G . E ., and the rest ot the grand officers coupled with the names of Sir Knts . Littlo and Woodman grand officers . Sir Knt . Little responded and expressed his gratification at the manner in whh-li tbe Order had progressed . He thought they might well look forward to a happy and glorious state of things when the Red Cross Order was placed on the footing it was justly entitled to . Sir Knt . Woodman also returned thanks and said he was satisfied

christian Masonry would go on and prosper . Sir Knt . LeVKnder proposed the health of Sovereign Quilty . He was sure they could not have had a better man than they were fortunate enough to secure in the person of Sir Knt . Quilty . He had discharged his duties with great carefulness and precision , and he concluded by wishing him long life and happiness . The toast was heartily received . Sir Knt . Perrot accompanied by Sir Knt . Weaver

sang in an excellent manner " When other lips , " Sov . Quilt responded in a suitable manner . It would always be a source of gratification to him to remember that the Roman Eagle Conclave took its first flight under his guidance . If , however , it had lost a few of its feathers he hoped it would soon get a fresh plumage . He concluded by proposing the health of Sir Knt . Maya ' s visitors which was done equal justice , to . Sir Knt . Mayo rose with a great deal of pleasure to return thanks . Sir Knt . Weaver played in excellent style the " Danish Quadrilles . " Other toasts and songs were given and the rest of the evening was passed in uninterrupted harmony .

The Prince Of Wales And Freemasonry.

THE PRINCE OF WALES AND FREEMASONRY .

Mr . Shirley Brooks indulged the other day in some caustic remarks respecting tho declinature of the Prince of Wales to become a Freemason . Puneli , to which Mr . Brooks is a very old and valued contributor , has tickled the subject with the straw of his exuberant fancy , and , to complete Jerrold ' s phrase , the country bus ' smiled plenty . " Freemasonry and Freemasons are

too important , and bulk too largely in our social system to be disposed of by a pleasantry . We are not supposed to know aught of their mysteries , and it is on this ground that the Prince has declined to ally himself with what , by an unusual expansion of meaning may be called a secret society . Secret societies are unquestionably foreign to the English character and temperament ; and

, although we admire the Prince's prudence in refusing to blindly associate himself with a system of which he knows nothing , we are afraid an improper inference may be deduced therefrom . What aro the general purposes of Freemasonry ? With the pretensions of the Freemasons to a marvellous antiquity we have little to do .

Nor need we follow those who advance such claims through the mystic windings of elaborate chronology . It has been said that it is easier to come down from a remote ancestor like Adam , than it is to trace the various families of man up to him . Let us , therefore , take it for granted that the "Free and Accepted Masons" have as cogent reasons for going no higher than the building

of the Tower of Babel for their origin , than the Highlander who declared that his progenitor had a boat to himself at the Flood . A long pedigree proverbially forms a very pleasing reflection to Scotchmen and "Welshmen ; how much more so the genealogy of a corporation , which stretches through the mists and darkness , the very night and morning of history ?—standing out a

particular star in the human constellation , untouched by the rise and fall of nations , or dynasties , by the loftiest splendours , or the lowest degradations , through which mankind havo passed . If the assertion has , as some of our readers may be disposed to think , the flavour of audacity , it is equally distinguished by touches of the sublime ; for Masonry , by perpetuating the chief

Christian virtues—Faith , Hope , and Charity—must , through all tbe stages of its career , havo nourished and sustained the elements of pure religion . In that respect we can look upon its claim to having been originated in the pre-historic time with a reverend regard , and forget in tho good it must have accomplished , all that savours of the fabulous and ridiculous . If we examine

the estimates which the uninitiated or popular world would form , our respect for the institution must be sincere . That it encouraged the arts is unquestionable , In architecture it numbered among its body the Cyclops , whom the Freemasons speak of , nor , as mythical personages , but as those wonderful Masons , whose piles of hewn stone of ponderous dimensions still remain ; the

Greeks , who conspicuously proved that beauty moulded and shaped by human hands was " a joy for ever ; " the Bomans , their successors ; the Saracens , whose inventive power ivas alone excelled by the ancient Greeks ; and all the modern nations who have built upon and adopted with rare manipulation the models of the faded centuries . The sister arts , painting and sculpture , must

have followed in the train of architecture , and these three , commanding a knowledge ol' the exact sciences tempt us to imagine that , could an ancient Egyptian rise from his cedar coflln in one of our museums , he would recognise many a " brother " gazing at his mummy form in profound speculation over the mysteries of his extraordinary nation and people . The Jews , too , the second ethnological mystery , must notice in the Mason the builders of their renowned Temple . Indeed , if Freemasonry is to be literally accented , it can scarcelv fail

to be identified with all the grand structural creations of which there are any record . The wanderings of the fraternity , we are assured , can bo traced to the ecclesiastical edifices of the middle ages ; and if the strictly mechanical character of the order lias been lost , it must be entirely attributed to the diffusion of that knowledge among the people of which the Freemasons were ancientl y

the sole depositories . Being inseparably connected with , the arts and sciences , literature must have found in them apt scholars ; and how gratifying it must be to the Mason of an imaginative turn of mind to reflect that the " grip " Socrates gave to Plato has been " handed" down to him through Seneca , and the host of philosophers who bring us down to the Keplers , the Laplaces , the Newtons , the

Bacons , and the Mills of modern times . There is something very satisfactory in such a conception . Within the last hundred years , to what an extent has nob Freemasonry cultivated and disseminated the principles of religious and political liberty , exercising potent influence over the schools of thought ? It has passed through many persecutions and tempests unscathed . Its vitality was , indeed , too great to be extinguished by any power that blindly arrayed itself against the true interests and irresistable instincts of humanity . In this ( we do not

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1868-11-07, Page 19” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 12 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_07111868/page/19/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
CHIPS OF FOREIGN ASHLAR. Article 1
THE CORINTHIAN ORDER; OR, THE THREE GRAND PILLARS. Article 2
THE KNIGHTS TEMPLARS. Article 5
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 6
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 8
THE MASONIC LIFEBOAT. Article 9
GRAND LODGE OF MARK MASTERS. Article 9
A COMPLIMENT. Article 9
CAPTAIN TORCKLER. Article 10
THE RED CROSS ORDER. Article 10
ROYAL ARCH MASONRY IN IRELAND. Article 10
MASONIC MEMS. Article 11
METROPOLITAN. Article 11
PROVINCIAL. Article 13
SCOTLAND. Article 17
IRELAND. Article 17
ROYAL ARCH. Article 17
MARK MASONRY. Article 18
RED CROSS OF ROME AND CONSTANTINE. Article 19
THE PRINCE OF WALES AND FREEMASONRY. Article 19
PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 20
THE WEEK ENDING NOVEMBER 14TH, 1868. Article 20
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 20
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Red Cross Of Rome And Constantine.

RED CROSS OF ROME AND CONSTANTINE .

EOMAN - EAGLE CONCLAVE , ( NO . 6 ) . —On Saturday evening the 24 th ult ., a meeting of No . 6 on the Eoman Eagle Conclave of ¦ the knights oftlie Red Cross of Borne and Constantino , was held at Andertons' Hotel , Fleet-street . The chair was taken at five o ' clock precisely , by the Eminent and P . Sir Knt . William , F . H . Quilty , K . G . C ., M . P . Sovereign , Eminent Sir Knt . Henry C . Levander , M . A . being Viceroy Eusebins . Amongst the other Sir Knts . Compspresent wereWoodmanM . D-HarrisonM . D .,

, , , , , R . W . Little , P . S ., P . M ., & c , & c , G . E ., J . Brett , K . G . C ., & c , Weaver , Org ., Foulger , H . Thompson , C . B . Thompson , Ormond Perrot , Smith . The only visitor present being Sir Knt . Mayo , of the Plantagenet Conclave . The minutes of the last assembly of the conclave were read in the absence through indisposition of Sir Knt . A . A . Pendlebury , K . G . C ., read by Sir Knt . Woodman . Sir Knt . Levander was elected M . P . Sov ., Woodman

Viceroy ; Quilty , Treas ., ancl Gilbert , Sentinel . When the business had been concluded the conclave was closed with solemn prayer . The assemblage then adjourned to the banqueting hall where dinner was served in first class style . The cloth having been drawn and grace said , the M . P . S . gave "The Queen and Christian Masonry , " drunk in the usual manner observed iu the Order . The health of Lord Konlis , W . M . of the Order followed

to which the S . briefly alluded as his excellences were well known , an example of his abilities having lately been shown at the recent resuscitation of the Order . The toast was drunk with honours . The S . called upon the conclave to rise and drink to

the health of Sir Frank Martin William , G . E ., and the rest ot the grand officers coupled with the names of Sir Knts . Littlo and Woodman grand officers . Sir Knt . Little responded and expressed his gratification at the manner in whh-li tbe Order had progressed . He thought they might well look forward to a happy and glorious state of things when the Red Cross Order was placed on the footing it was justly entitled to . Sir Knt . Woodman also returned thanks and said he was satisfied

christian Masonry would go on and prosper . Sir Knt . LeVKnder proposed the health of Sovereign Quilty . He was sure they could not have had a better man than they were fortunate enough to secure in the person of Sir Knt . Quilty . He had discharged his duties with great carefulness and precision , and he concluded by wishing him long life and happiness . The toast was heartily received . Sir Knt . Perrot accompanied by Sir Knt . Weaver

sang in an excellent manner " When other lips , " Sov . Quilt responded in a suitable manner . It would always be a source of gratification to him to remember that the Roman Eagle Conclave took its first flight under his guidance . If , however , it had lost a few of its feathers he hoped it would soon get a fresh plumage . He concluded by proposing the health of Sir Knt . Maya ' s visitors which was done equal justice , to . Sir Knt . Mayo rose with a great deal of pleasure to return thanks . Sir Knt . Weaver played in excellent style the " Danish Quadrilles . " Other toasts and songs were given and the rest of the evening was passed in uninterrupted harmony .

The Prince Of Wales And Freemasonry.

THE PRINCE OF WALES AND FREEMASONRY .

Mr . Shirley Brooks indulged the other day in some caustic remarks respecting tho declinature of the Prince of Wales to become a Freemason . Puneli , to which Mr . Brooks is a very old and valued contributor , has tickled the subject with the straw of his exuberant fancy , and , to complete Jerrold ' s phrase , the country bus ' smiled plenty . " Freemasonry and Freemasons are

too important , and bulk too largely in our social system to be disposed of by a pleasantry . We are not supposed to know aught of their mysteries , and it is on this ground that the Prince has declined to ally himself with what , by an unusual expansion of meaning may be called a secret society . Secret societies are unquestionably foreign to the English character and temperament ; and

, although we admire the Prince's prudence in refusing to blindly associate himself with a system of which he knows nothing , we are afraid an improper inference may be deduced therefrom . What aro the general purposes of Freemasonry ? With the pretensions of the Freemasons to a marvellous antiquity we have little to do .

Nor need we follow those who advance such claims through the mystic windings of elaborate chronology . It has been said that it is easier to come down from a remote ancestor like Adam , than it is to trace the various families of man up to him . Let us , therefore , take it for granted that the "Free and Accepted Masons" have as cogent reasons for going no higher than the building

of the Tower of Babel for their origin , than the Highlander who declared that his progenitor had a boat to himself at the Flood . A long pedigree proverbially forms a very pleasing reflection to Scotchmen and "Welshmen ; how much more so the genealogy of a corporation , which stretches through the mists and darkness , the very night and morning of history ?—standing out a

particular star in the human constellation , untouched by the rise and fall of nations , or dynasties , by the loftiest splendours , or the lowest degradations , through which mankind havo passed . If the assertion has , as some of our readers may be disposed to think , the flavour of audacity , it is equally distinguished by touches of the sublime ; for Masonry , by perpetuating the chief

Christian virtues—Faith , Hope , and Charity—must , through all tbe stages of its career , havo nourished and sustained the elements of pure religion . In that respect we can look upon its claim to having been originated in the pre-historic time with a reverend regard , and forget in tho good it must have accomplished , all that savours of the fabulous and ridiculous . If we examine

the estimates which the uninitiated or popular world would form , our respect for the institution must be sincere . That it encouraged the arts is unquestionable , In architecture it numbered among its body the Cyclops , whom the Freemasons speak of , nor , as mythical personages , but as those wonderful Masons , whose piles of hewn stone of ponderous dimensions still remain ; the

Greeks , who conspicuously proved that beauty moulded and shaped by human hands was " a joy for ever ; " the Bomans , their successors ; the Saracens , whose inventive power ivas alone excelled by the ancient Greeks ; and all the modern nations who have built upon and adopted with rare manipulation the models of the faded centuries . The sister arts , painting and sculpture , must

have followed in the train of architecture , and these three , commanding a knowledge ol' the exact sciences tempt us to imagine that , could an ancient Egyptian rise from his cedar coflln in one of our museums , he would recognise many a " brother " gazing at his mummy form in profound speculation over the mysteries of his extraordinary nation and people . The Jews , too , the second ethnological mystery , must notice in the Mason the builders of their renowned Temple . Indeed , if Freemasonry is to be literally accented , it can scarcelv fail

to be identified with all the grand structural creations of which there are any record . The wanderings of the fraternity , we are assured , can bo traced to the ecclesiastical edifices of the middle ages ; and if the strictly mechanical character of the order lias been lost , it must be entirely attributed to the diffusion of that knowledge among the people of which the Freemasons were ancientl y

the sole depositories . Being inseparably connected with , the arts and sciences , literature must have found in them apt scholars ; and how gratifying it must be to the Mason of an imaginative turn of mind to reflect that the " grip " Socrates gave to Plato has been " handed" down to him through Seneca , and the host of philosophers who bring us down to the Keplers , the Laplaces , the Newtons , the

Bacons , and the Mills of modern times . There is something very satisfactory in such a conception . Within the last hundred years , to what an extent has nob Freemasonry cultivated and disseminated the principles of religious and political liberty , exercising potent influence over the schools of thought ? It has passed through many persecutions and tempests unscathed . Its vitality was , indeed , too great to be extinguished by any power that blindly arrayed itself against the true interests and irresistable instincts of humanity . In this ( we do not

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