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  • June 8, 1861
  • Page 10
  • THE LATE BRO. EVANS.
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, June 8, 1861: Page 10

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    Article CORRESPONDENCE. Page 1 of 1
    Article THE LATE BRO. EVANS. Page 1 of 1
    Article BURNS'S MOTHER LODGE. Page 1 of 1
    Article BURNS'S MOTHER LODGE. Page 1 of 1
    Article PROVINCE OF WEST YORKSHIRE. Page 1 of 2 →
Page 10

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Correspondence.

CORRESPONDENCE .

The Editor is not responsible for the opinions expressed hi ] Correspondents . THE "HIGHER GRADES . " 10 THZ EDITOIt or THE Er . EEMASONS JIAG 1 ZINE AXD MASONIC 1 IIEROR . DEAR SIB AXD BROTHER , —Charity is a Masonic virtue , and I should be sorry to be found deficient in it to those who differ with mc in opinion . I am quite willing for my and

brother Masons to play at being Sir Knights Most Wise Sovereigns , if it pleases them ; but Icannot allow them to under-rato our ancient and beautiful Craft , to which they still owe fealty , whatever other degrees they may choose to take . Your correspondent , " P . M ., P . Z ., & c , " aud myself must " agree to differ " on the antiquity of the "hiher degrees . " I do not wish to force inions

g my op either upon him or others , and I thank him truly for the courtesy of his reply , notwithstanding that he has rather too hastily set me down as uncharitable . But my own opinion is , that the Craft and some portions of the Mark are tho only degrees that are really and truly ancient . Of course , from time to time , there has been much variation in what we call non-essentials in those andthough I

may ; , have no wish , even if it were possible , to pen up operative Masonry iu tyled lodges , yet I think the divorce has been carried to far , and that architecture ought yet to be a necessary teaching in tho Craft . I am , Dear Sir and Brother ,- yours fraternally , BBOTHEE , PETER . Never-Mind-Where , June 1 st , 1861 .

The Late Bro. Evans.

THE LATE BRO . EVANS .

TO THE EDITOK 07 THE PEEEMASONS MAGAZINE AND MASONIC JIIBB 0 H . SIK AXD BHOIIIEK , —On behalf of Mrs . Evans I beg and acknowledge the following addition to the subscriptions on her behalf . Amount acknowledged in THE MAGAZIXE for May 25 th £ 28 1 0 Bro . A . Perrier , Lota , Cork 1 0 o BroGHaward 110

. . Bro . H . A . Isaacs 5 0 Total ... £ 30 7 0 _ With many thanks to yourself , Mr . Editor , for your consideration in allowing these weekly communications of mine , I remain , faithfully yours , JoHX MOTT TlIEABLE .

Burns's Mother Lodge.

BURNS'S MOTHER LODGE .

"The brethren o' the mystic level May lvrng their head in woefu' bevel , While by their nose the tears will revel , Like ony bead ; GTEIED ' S gi ' en the lodge an unco ( level—ST . DAVID ' S dead . " TO ME EDITOI ! OE THE PHEEMASONS MAGAZINE AND MASONIC MIEKOB .

SIR , —The indignation of the Craft has been justly excited by the appearance in the columns of that widely-circulated journal , the Ayr Adoertiser , of a Masonic advertisement of a novel and unusual character . Most unfortunatel y for the credit of Masonry , the charter and minute-books of Tarbolton St . David ' s have been allowed to fall into the hands of some two or three individuals in the village of Tarbolton

, who , so far from preserving , inviolate their sacred trust , have wounded the feelings of the Craft universal , and the Scottish brethren in particular , by offering for public sale Masonic documents which were never intended to meet the eye of the uninitiated . St . David ' s was instituted in 1773 , and is well known as Burns ' s Mother Lodge—being that in which Barns was " entered , " and under whose charter the immortal

poet was " raised" to the summit of ancient Craft Masonry . The career of this lodge has indeed been a chequered one , and its past history could afford rich and ample material for one of Rob Morris ' s best Masonic tales : but the present episode iu its existence eclipses all its predecessors , inasmuch as the contemplated act of spoliation

Burns's Mother Lodge.

( viz ., the sale of the charter and books ) , if allowed to be perpetrated , would by every zealous and intelligent brother be looked upon as nothing short of a desecration of Masonry , and a repudiation of the most solemn of all Masonic covenants . We believe the persons implicated in this business think they are doing nothing amiss , but in this they prove themselves to have been superficiallinstructed in the

very y laws and constitution of Ereemasonry , and lay themselves open to the charge of being too intent on their own personal aggrandisement to care much for the interest of the Order ,. of which they are , nominally at least , members . Could the poet have foreseen the fate to which a few mercenary and unmasonic spirits should consign the charter of his mother lod one of his stinging satirical epitaphs would have

imge , mortalised the trio in a way different to that in which he has rendered famous the sister lodge of Tarbolton—Kilwinning St . James . But apart altogether from the impropriety of offering for sale the charter and books of a Masonic body , the gentlemen holding possession of these documents have no special right of property in this case over any other Mason who may have been made in St . David ' s Lodge at

any period prior to its becoming dormant in 1843 . There are many such alive—some within a tolerably moderate " cable-tow ' s" length of the village of Tarbolton , and whom we are glad to know are bestirring themselves for the protection of the honour of their mother lodge . They have an undoubted right to interfere—nay , it is their bounden duty •—to prevent the alienation of the charter and minutes to other than Masonic purposes ; and any arrangement that both parties might agree upon , as to removal or transfer of

the charter , must meet tho approval of , and be ratified by the Grand Lodge of Scotland . A Masonic charter is not a piece of merchandise , and can never be held as private property : it is granted to the brethren named in it , and to their successors in office- —to be worked by them in connection with , and under the government of , the Supreme Body of Ereemasons granting tho charter , and can be cancelled or

taken possession of by them at any time . If the would-be sellers of the property of St . David ' s , or the other members of the lodge opposed to such a step , have no wish to work the lodge , then let them return the charter to the Grand Lodge , or what would bo to my mind a more graceful and appropriate compliment to the memory of the Ayrshire Bard and Brotherhand the charterbooksand paraphernalia

, , , over to the Master and Wardens of Tarbolton Kilwinning St . James ' s , for preservation , along with the other relics of the poet , in the archives of the lodge to which his " heartwarm fond adieu" was addressed , and in which his "last request" is still most religiously complied with . The brethren in the county should remain no longer quiescent in this important matter : every lodge should raise its voice

in protest against the act , and petition Bro . Sir James Eergusson to summon a meeting of the Provincial Grand Lodge , to authorise tho interdict of further proceedings on the part of those attempting to traffic in Masonry . The Southern taunts the Scot with having sold his king : let it never bo recorded to the disgrace of the cradle-land of Scottish Masonry , that the fraternity in Ayrshire permitted the

sale of Burns's Mother Lodge . Yours fraternally , D . MUBEAY LYOX , J . W . Mother Kilwinning . Ayr , May 30 th , 1861 . P . S . —Can any of your correspondents inform the Craft as to how the symbols of the 3 G . LL . of Masonry , with the flag , and the funds belonging to the Lodge St . David , have been disposed of ? A +

Province Of West Yorkshire.

PROVINCE OF WEST YORKSHIRE .

TO THE EDITOR OJ ? THE EEEEMAS 0 N 3 MAGAZINE AND MASONIC MIP . HOR . In yonr account of the installation proceedings at Leeds , on the 23 rd ult ., I find no mention made of the presence of our R . W . Bro . AVm . Thos . Greaves , D . Prov . G . Master for Cumberland , and two other brethren representing the Senior and Junior Wardens of that province . It is considered a point of the highest pride and gratification amongst West Yorkshire Masons to show courtesy to , and

suitably acknowledge the presence of , visiting brethren from other provinces , whatsoever may be their rank or standing . Our esteemed Bro . Greaves was with us during the whole-

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1861-06-08, Page 10” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 20 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_08061861/page/10/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
GRAND LODGE. Article 1
SENSIBLE LAWS. Article 1
MEMOIRS OF THE FREEMASONS OF NAPLES. Article 2
SIR CHRISTOPHER WREN AND HIS TIMES. Article 3
GENERAL ARCHITECTURAL INTELLIGENCE. Article 5
Literature. Article 6
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART. Article 7
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 9
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 10
THE LATE BRO. EVANS. Article 10
BURNS'S MOTHER LODGE. Article 10
PROVINCE OF WEST YORKSHIRE. Article 10
KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. Article 11
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 11
GRAND LODGE. Article 11
PROVINCIAL. Article 15
CHANNEL ISLANDS. Article 17
ROYAL ARCH. Article 17
KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. Article 17
ANCIENT AND ACCEPTED RITE. Article 18
Obituary. Article 18
Poetry. Article 18
NOTES ON MUSIC AND THE DRAMA. Article 18
THE WEEK. Article 19
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 20
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Correspondence.

CORRESPONDENCE .

The Editor is not responsible for the opinions expressed hi ] Correspondents . THE "HIGHER GRADES . " 10 THZ EDITOIt or THE Er . EEMASONS JIAG 1 ZINE AXD MASONIC 1 IIEROR . DEAR SIB AXD BROTHER , —Charity is a Masonic virtue , and I should be sorry to be found deficient in it to those who differ with mc in opinion . I am quite willing for my and

brother Masons to play at being Sir Knights Most Wise Sovereigns , if it pleases them ; but Icannot allow them to under-rato our ancient and beautiful Craft , to which they still owe fealty , whatever other degrees they may choose to take . Your correspondent , " P . M ., P . Z ., & c , " aud myself must " agree to differ " on the antiquity of the "hiher degrees . " I do not wish to force inions

g my op either upon him or others , and I thank him truly for the courtesy of his reply , notwithstanding that he has rather too hastily set me down as uncharitable . But my own opinion is , that the Craft and some portions of the Mark are tho only degrees that are really and truly ancient . Of course , from time to time , there has been much variation in what we call non-essentials in those andthough I

may ; , have no wish , even if it were possible , to pen up operative Masonry iu tyled lodges , yet I think the divorce has been carried to far , and that architecture ought yet to be a necessary teaching in tho Craft . I am , Dear Sir and Brother ,- yours fraternally , BBOTHEE , PETER . Never-Mind-Where , June 1 st , 1861 .

The Late Bro. Evans.

THE LATE BRO . EVANS .

TO THE EDITOK 07 THE PEEEMASONS MAGAZINE AND MASONIC JIIBB 0 H . SIK AXD BHOIIIEK , —On behalf of Mrs . Evans I beg and acknowledge the following addition to the subscriptions on her behalf . Amount acknowledged in THE MAGAZIXE for May 25 th £ 28 1 0 Bro . A . Perrier , Lota , Cork 1 0 o BroGHaward 110

. . Bro . H . A . Isaacs 5 0 Total ... £ 30 7 0 _ With many thanks to yourself , Mr . Editor , for your consideration in allowing these weekly communications of mine , I remain , faithfully yours , JoHX MOTT TlIEABLE .

Burns's Mother Lodge.

BURNS'S MOTHER LODGE .

"The brethren o' the mystic level May lvrng their head in woefu' bevel , While by their nose the tears will revel , Like ony bead ; GTEIED ' S gi ' en the lodge an unco ( level—ST . DAVID ' S dead . " TO ME EDITOI ! OE THE PHEEMASONS MAGAZINE AND MASONIC MIEKOB .

SIR , —The indignation of the Craft has been justly excited by the appearance in the columns of that widely-circulated journal , the Ayr Adoertiser , of a Masonic advertisement of a novel and unusual character . Most unfortunatel y for the credit of Masonry , the charter and minute-books of Tarbolton St . David ' s have been allowed to fall into the hands of some two or three individuals in the village of Tarbolton

, who , so far from preserving , inviolate their sacred trust , have wounded the feelings of the Craft universal , and the Scottish brethren in particular , by offering for public sale Masonic documents which were never intended to meet the eye of the uninitiated . St . David ' s was instituted in 1773 , and is well known as Burns ' s Mother Lodge—being that in which Barns was " entered , " and under whose charter the immortal

poet was " raised" to the summit of ancient Craft Masonry . The career of this lodge has indeed been a chequered one , and its past history could afford rich and ample material for one of Rob Morris ' s best Masonic tales : but the present episode iu its existence eclipses all its predecessors , inasmuch as the contemplated act of spoliation

Burns's Mother Lodge.

( viz ., the sale of the charter and books ) , if allowed to be perpetrated , would by every zealous and intelligent brother be looked upon as nothing short of a desecration of Masonry , and a repudiation of the most solemn of all Masonic covenants . We believe the persons implicated in this business think they are doing nothing amiss , but in this they prove themselves to have been superficiallinstructed in the

very y laws and constitution of Ereemasonry , and lay themselves open to the charge of being too intent on their own personal aggrandisement to care much for the interest of the Order ,. of which they are , nominally at least , members . Could the poet have foreseen the fate to which a few mercenary and unmasonic spirits should consign the charter of his mother lod one of his stinging satirical epitaphs would have

imge , mortalised the trio in a way different to that in which he has rendered famous the sister lodge of Tarbolton—Kilwinning St . James . But apart altogether from the impropriety of offering for sale the charter and books of a Masonic body , the gentlemen holding possession of these documents have no special right of property in this case over any other Mason who may have been made in St . David ' s Lodge at

any period prior to its becoming dormant in 1843 . There are many such alive—some within a tolerably moderate " cable-tow ' s" length of the village of Tarbolton , and whom we are glad to know are bestirring themselves for the protection of the honour of their mother lodge . They have an undoubted right to interfere—nay , it is their bounden duty •—to prevent the alienation of the charter and minutes to other than Masonic purposes ; and any arrangement that both parties might agree upon , as to removal or transfer of

the charter , must meet tho approval of , and be ratified by the Grand Lodge of Scotland . A Masonic charter is not a piece of merchandise , and can never be held as private property : it is granted to the brethren named in it , and to their successors in office- —to be worked by them in connection with , and under the government of , the Supreme Body of Ereemasons granting tho charter , and can be cancelled or

taken possession of by them at any time . If the would-be sellers of the property of St . David ' s , or the other members of the lodge opposed to such a step , have no wish to work the lodge , then let them return the charter to the Grand Lodge , or what would bo to my mind a more graceful and appropriate compliment to the memory of the Ayrshire Bard and Brotherhand the charterbooksand paraphernalia

, , , over to the Master and Wardens of Tarbolton Kilwinning St . James ' s , for preservation , along with the other relics of the poet , in the archives of the lodge to which his " heartwarm fond adieu" was addressed , and in which his "last request" is still most religiously complied with . The brethren in the county should remain no longer quiescent in this important matter : every lodge should raise its voice

in protest against the act , and petition Bro . Sir James Eergusson to summon a meeting of the Provincial Grand Lodge , to authorise tho interdict of further proceedings on the part of those attempting to traffic in Masonry . The Southern taunts the Scot with having sold his king : let it never bo recorded to the disgrace of the cradle-land of Scottish Masonry , that the fraternity in Ayrshire permitted the

sale of Burns's Mother Lodge . Yours fraternally , D . MUBEAY LYOX , J . W . Mother Kilwinning . Ayr , May 30 th , 1861 . P . S . —Can any of your correspondents inform the Craft as to how the symbols of the 3 G . LL . of Masonry , with the flag , and the funds belonging to the Lodge St . David , have been disposed of ? A +

Province Of West Yorkshire.

PROVINCE OF WEST YORKSHIRE .

TO THE EDITOR OJ ? THE EEEEMAS 0 N 3 MAGAZINE AND MASONIC MIP . HOR . In yonr account of the installation proceedings at Leeds , on the 23 rd ult ., I find no mention made of the presence of our R . W . Bro . AVm . Thos . Greaves , D . Prov . G . Master for Cumberland , and two other brethren representing the Senior and Junior Wardens of that province . It is considered a point of the highest pride and gratification amongst West Yorkshire Masons to show courtesy to , and

suitably acknowledge the presence of , visiting brethren from other provinces , whatsoever may be their rank or standing . Our esteemed Bro . Greaves was with us during the whole-

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