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  • The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine
  • April 27, 1859
  • Page 13
  • MODERN WRITERS UPON FREEMASONRY.—I.
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, April 27, 1859: Page 13

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    Article MODERN WRITERS UPON FREEMASONRY.—I. ← Page 6 of 8 →
Page 13

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Modern Writers Upon Freemasonry.—I.

nients that we should " to a well informed ancl accomplished mind , add elegance of manners ?" But , now , to turn to what ive may term the more legal or ( not in its usual sense ) political part of the book . There is really here much that is worthy of praise . On page 31 we find this head : —2 . " Candidates should apply to the nearest Lodge ; " ancl the doctor then proceeds

to state that " the application of a candidate to a distant or strange Lodge , has a suspicious appearance , although he may have very good private reasons for it . " We here quite agree with him , and could much wish that some clause were added to the Book of Constitutions

to obviate the evil arising from the practice . The fault is not with the candidate , or with the Lodges in or near his place of residence , but with the Lodge which admits him . No Lodge ought to admit any person apjilying to them from a distance , or proposed from a distance for initiation , without first having , from himself , a good and sufficient reason for wishing to join them , in preference to the Masons of the Lodges in his own town or neighbourhoodancl from the

, brethren of such Lodges , an assurance ( in conformity with the requirement of the Constitution ) that his circumstances are reputable , ancl that they , as a body , ivould not object to receive him were he to apply to them . Common courtesy , we should have thought , would dictate such a course , but as , inadvertently or otherwise , the evil is sometimes alloweda clause to this effect in the Book of Constitutions would

, certainly have a beneficial effect . We know of more than one instance in which a very respectable Lodge has been seriously annoyed by the initiation , elsewhere , without any inquiry , of persons who have been informed , or to whose proposer it has been intimated , that the black ball would certainly be freely used if they came to the ballot , and by tbe visits afterwards of

these objectionable persons ; ancl thus the comfort , not merely of a Lodge , but more or less of a whole province or district , may be effected . We must more especially complain of the prevalence of this objectionable practice in Scotland , where a man , refused in England , may go , ancl on declaring that he is about to leave the country ( almost a sufficient reason we should think for refusing to admit at all an

unknown individual , as likely perhaps to inflict an objectionable person on the brethren of another country ) , be initiated , passed , and raised in an incredibly short time ; ancl , to the annoyance of those who would have refused him here , come home a full blown Master Mason . Surely , with a representative from ancl at the Grand Lodge of Scotland , the latter of whom is our own Deputy Grand Master , who is both an English and a Scotch Masonand of rank and influence in

, both capacities , some plan might be devised for stopping those serious evils . But if we complain of Scotland , so do some of our colonial brethren of England , ancl we have a letter from one of tbe West India Islands , which , though not written for publication , we find so a propos , that

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1859-04-27, Page 13” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 25 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_27041859/page/13/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
MASONIC MISSIONS. Article 1
MODERN WRITERS UPON FREEMASONRY.—I. Article 8
THE CRAFT AND ITS CRITICISERS.-II. Article 16
HURRYING CANDIDATES THROUGH THE DEGREES. Article 19
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 20
THE PROVINCE OF DEVON. Article 21
MASONIC HALLS. Article 22
MASONIC ANTIQUITIES. Article 23
MASONIC MISSIONS. Article 23
MASONIC JURISPRUDENCE. Article 23
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 25
METROPOLITAN. Article 26
PROVINCIAL. Article 29
ROYAL ARCH. Article 31
KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. Article 34
SCOTLAND. Article 35
IRELAND. Article 36
AUSTRALIA. Article 36
CHINA. Article 38
INDIA. Article 39
AMERICA. Article 40
TURKEY. Article 42
THE WEEK. Article 43
Obituary. Article 47
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 47
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Modern Writers Upon Freemasonry.—I.

nients that we should " to a well informed ancl accomplished mind , add elegance of manners ?" But , now , to turn to what ive may term the more legal or ( not in its usual sense ) political part of the book . There is really here much that is worthy of praise . On page 31 we find this head : —2 . " Candidates should apply to the nearest Lodge ; " ancl the doctor then proceeds

to state that " the application of a candidate to a distant or strange Lodge , has a suspicious appearance , although he may have very good private reasons for it . " We here quite agree with him , and could much wish that some clause were added to the Book of Constitutions

to obviate the evil arising from the practice . The fault is not with the candidate , or with the Lodges in or near his place of residence , but with the Lodge which admits him . No Lodge ought to admit any person apjilying to them from a distance , or proposed from a distance for initiation , without first having , from himself , a good and sufficient reason for wishing to join them , in preference to the Masons of the Lodges in his own town or neighbourhoodancl from the

, brethren of such Lodges , an assurance ( in conformity with the requirement of the Constitution ) that his circumstances are reputable , ancl that they , as a body , ivould not object to receive him were he to apply to them . Common courtesy , we should have thought , would dictate such a course , but as , inadvertently or otherwise , the evil is sometimes alloweda clause to this effect in the Book of Constitutions would

, certainly have a beneficial effect . We know of more than one instance in which a very respectable Lodge has been seriously annoyed by the initiation , elsewhere , without any inquiry , of persons who have been informed , or to whose proposer it has been intimated , that the black ball would certainly be freely used if they came to the ballot , and by tbe visits afterwards of

these objectionable persons ; ancl thus the comfort , not merely of a Lodge , but more or less of a whole province or district , may be effected . We must more especially complain of the prevalence of this objectionable practice in Scotland , where a man , refused in England , may go , ancl on declaring that he is about to leave the country ( almost a sufficient reason we should think for refusing to admit at all an

unknown individual , as likely perhaps to inflict an objectionable person on the brethren of another country ) , be initiated , passed , and raised in an incredibly short time ; ancl , to the annoyance of those who would have refused him here , come home a full blown Master Mason . Surely , with a representative from ancl at the Grand Lodge of Scotland , the latter of whom is our own Deputy Grand Master , who is both an English and a Scotch Masonand of rank and influence in

, both capacities , some plan might be devised for stopping those serious evils . But if we complain of Scotland , so do some of our colonial brethren of England , ancl we have a letter from one of tbe West India Islands , which , though not written for publication , we find so a propos , that

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