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  • The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine
  • March 28, 1863
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  • FREEMASONRY IN FRANCE.
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, March 28, 1863: Page 3

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Freemasonry In France.

lodge to meet in solemn conclave . He proposes that the Grand Orient premises should be sold to pay the debt , as they are partly occupied by the Casino ; but the Ereemasons object , they like to be able to join in the dance with the merry mercenaries after their mystic . banquets . The Marshal then proposed that they should borrow the money to pay off Prince Murat

from the Credit Eoncier . M . Fremj ' , the manager , refuses to lend to any society which is not declared to be of " public utility . " The Council of State is called upon to decide ; they hesitated , even with their disposition to oblige , to " pronounce the Masons of public utility ; but their hesitation vanished on

learning that by thus assimilating the Ereemasons to other societies the Prefect of Police would have the right to send his moucliards . and agents to all the Masons ' meetings , and to appoint all the principal officers . The ladies are in raptures , as they think that they will now be able to worm out of the police those secrets of the Craft which are withheld from them even by their lovers ,

Another Paris letter says : —¦ The Ereemasons , of whom little has been heard since the coup d ' etat , which forced them to accept Marshal Magnan for their Grand Master , about a year and a half ago , are in trouble again . They fear to lose the few privileges of a free association , which

that sinister event left them still in possession of . It appears that the former Grand Master , Prince Murat , lent some money to the Craft for the repair and decoration of the Grand Lodge , in Rue Cadet . His conduct in opposing the election of Prince Napoleon , and thus producing the disorders and scandal which

afforded the Emperor an excuse for taking the election of a Grand Master out' of the hands of the brethren , rendered Murat hopelessly unpopular among Ereemasons . He now calls in bis money . The Committee of the Grand Lodge , in order to pay himhas applied to the Credit Eoncier for a loan upon

, a mortgage of tbe premises in the Rue Cadet . The Credit Eoncier , actuated , it is supposed , less by business considerations than by a hint from high quarter , objects that the security will be insufficient so

long as the . Ereemasons are not a society recognised by law as one of " public utility . '' Thereupon the Grand Master , Marshal Magnan , in order to meet the objection , applied to the Cuoncil of State to recognise Ereemasonry . A number of Masonic conscript fathers— "Past Masters

Wardens , and Deacon , "—have protested against this step of a Grand Master , as manifestly tending to fflake the Craft still more subservient to the gwernttent than it is already . The dissentients argue that if Masonry is to be made a " society of public utility , recognised by law , " its statutes must be approved of

V the government , and can never be altered without government permission . Mr . Eugene Delattre , a Paris barrister , has very energetically supported this view of the case . ' Marshal Magnan , who it must be admitted , has from the first done all that was possible to mitigate the ori ginal vice of his nomination

, and has , with really extraordinary tact , succeeded to a great extent in identif ying himself with the Craft , swears , " by his sword , " that he will cause the inherent Wghts of Masonry to be respected , and will resign if they are infringed . These assurances , though probably Well meant / failed to inspire the Craft with confidence .

Freemasonry In France.

Putting this and that together , they are led to fear that a vital blow is aimed against them at the present moment . Ereemasonry has always been detested by the Roman Catholic clergy . It is rumoured that tbe Empress has been set against the institution , and made to believe that its adepts are all atheists and miscreants . Under these circumstances , many leading Masons talk of retiring rather than pass under the yoke .

Another Lady Mason.

ANOTHER LADY MASON .

A ROMANCE ' as THE AMERICAN WAR . ( Coi'respondent of the Chicago Tribune . ) Among the many scenes of the war which have passed under my observation , my recollection enables me to give you an account of one of the most mysterious and strange adventures which . I have ever heard of .

During the month of August in 1861 , whiie our Ioiva regiment was stationed at Rolls , in Missouri , our company Avas detached from the regiment and sent to guard the railroad bridge at the Mozeille mills , which it was rumoured the gverillas of that neighbourhood were prepai'ing to destroy . We had been upon the ground but a few days when

there appeared in camp early one morning a very old , decrepid mule , which made direct for the door of a stable that adjoined the captain's quarters , from which , it appeared he had recently been stolen by a guerilla and carried aivay as a pack animal . Upon approaching the mule , a letter was discovered secured to the throatlatch of the bridle , which , being addressed to the

captain , ivas immediately handed into his quarters . Upon opening the letter , its contents ( written in the delicate handwriting of a female ) consisted of the following singular announcement : — "The Temple of Jerusalem was destroyed on the first Friday before the full moon . " The captain professed to understand it , and said , " The guerillas will attack the bridge to-night , " and immediately ordered the company to be mustered , and informed them of the imminence of an attack which might be looked for at any moment . Ammunition was

ordered to be distributed , the guards were doubled , pickets thrown out , and every precaution taken to guard against surprise . At the close of the day a drizzling rain set in , AA'hich continued until the next morning , causing the night to be intensely dark . Three picket stations had been thrown out into the country about half a mile from the opposite end of the

bridge , where the main guard was posted behind a pile of railroad ties . It was our lot to be one of the six that composed the midnight guard at this station . We had been upon our post about an hour when one of the men observed , " I bear footsteps . " We listened , and presently heard the footsteps of several persons approaching us , apparently with great cautionthrough a dense

under-, grovrth that skirted the opposite end of the road . The darkness of the night was so great that we could not see them even when they were within forty feet of us ; but ive could distinctly hear one of them observe in a petulant but suppressed tone , " Jim , hold up that gun of yours ; that ' s twice you ' ve stuck that bayonet in me . " At this moment we opened upon them with all our guns .

There' was no gun fired in return , but we could distinctly hear them for some time rushing with receding steps through the thicket , in the direction of a cornfield , in which stood a log cabin , occupied by a woman and two children , the husband and father of whom was a Union soldier in one of the Missouri regiments . The firing of our guns , which overshot the enemy , had aroused the entire command , and brought in the picket guard , when the log cabin alluded to was discovered to be on fire . Believing it to be the incendiary work of tbe

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1863-03-28, Page 3” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 21 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_28031863/page/3/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
CLASSICAL THEOLOGY,—LXIII. Article 1
MASONIC SAYINGS AND DOINGS ABROAD. Article 2
FREEMASONRY IN FRANCE. Article 2
ANOTHER LADY MASON. Article 3
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 5
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 7
METROPOLITAN. Article 8
PROVINCIAL. Article 11
SCOTLAND. Article 12
INDIA. Article 12
COLONIAL. Article 15
CHINA. Article 15
MASONIC FESTIVITIES. Article 16
KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. Article 17
Poetry. Article 17
THE WEEK. Article 17
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 20
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Freemasonry In France.

lodge to meet in solemn conclave . He proposes that the Grand Orient premises should be sold to pay the debt , as they are partly occupied by the Casino ; but the Ereemasons object , they like to be able to join in the dance with the merry mercenaries after their mystic . banquets . The Marshal then proposed that they should borrow the money to pay off Prince Murat

from the Credit Eoncier . M . Fremj ' , the manager , refuses to lend to any society which is not declared to be of " public utility . " The Council of State is called upon to decide ; they hesitated , even with their disposition to oblige , to " pronounce the Masons of public utility ; but their hesitation vanished on

learning that by thus assimilating the Ereemasons to other societies the Prefect of Police would have the right to send his moucliards . and agents to all the Masons ' meetings , and to appoint all the principal officers . The ladies are in raptures , as they think that they will now be able to worm out of the police those secrets of the Craft which are withheld from them even by their lovers ,

Another Paris letter says : —¦ The Ereemasons , of whom little has been heard since the coup d ' etat , which forced them to accept Marshal Magnan for their Grand Master , about a year and a half ago , are in trouble again . They fear to lose the few privileges of a free association , which

that sinister event left them still in possession of . It appears that the former Grand Master , Prince Murat , lent some money to the Craft for the repair and decoration of the Grand Lodge , in Rue Cadet . His conduct in opposing the election of Prince Napoleon , and thus producing the disorders and scandal which

afforded the Emperor an excuse for taking the election of a Grand Master out' of the hands of the brethren , rendered Murat hopelessly unpopular among Ereemasons . He now calls in bis money . The Committee of the Grand Lodge , in order to pay himhas applied to the Credit Eoncier for a loan upon

, a mortgage of tbe premises in the Rue Cadet . The Credit Eoncier , actuated , it is supposed , less by business considerations than by a hint from high quarter , objects that the security will be insufficient so

long as the . Ereemasons are not a society recognised by law as one of " public utility . '' Thereupon the Grand Master , Marshal Magnan , in order to meet the objection , applied to the Cuoncil of State to recognise Ereemasonry . A number of Masonic conscript fathers— "Past Masters

Wardens , and Deacon , "—have protested against this step of a Grand Master , as manifestly tending to fflake the Craft still more subservient to the gwernttent than it is already . The dissentients argue that if Masonry is to be made a " society of public utility , recognised by law , " its statutes must be approved of

V the government , and can never be altered without government permission . Mr . Eugene Delattre , a Paris barrister , has very energetically supported this view of the case . ' Marshal Magnan , who it must be admitted , has from the first done all that was possible to mitigate the ori ginal vice of his nomination

, and has , with really extraordinary tact , succeeded to a great extent in identif ying himself with the Craft , swears , " by his sword , " that he will cause the inherent Wghts of Masonry to be respected , and will resign if they are infringed . These assurances , though probably Well meant / failed to inspire the Craft with confidence .

Freemasonry In France.

Putting this and that together , they are led to fear that a vital blow is aimed against them at the present moment . Ereemasonry has always been detested by the Roman Catholic clergy . It is rumoured that tbe Empress has been set against the institution , and made to believe that its adepts are all atheists and miscreants . Under these circumstances , many leading Masons talk of retiring rather than pass under the yoke .

Another Lady Mason.

ANOTHER LADY MASON .

A ROMANCE ' as THE AMERICAN WAR . ( Coi'respondent of the Chicago Tribune . ) Among the many scenes of the war which have passed under my observation , my recollection enables me to give you an account of one of the most mysterious and strange adventures which . I have ever heard of .

During the month of August in 1861 , whiie our Ioiva regiment was stationed at Rolls , in Missouri , our company Avas detached from the regiment and sent to guard the railroad bridge at the Mozeille mills , which it was rumoured the gverillas of that neighbourhood were prepai'ing to destroy . We had been upon the ground but a few days when

there appeared in camp early one morning a very old , decrepid mule , which made direct for the door of a stable that adjoined the captain's quarters , from which , it appeared he had recently been stolen by a guerilla and carried aivay as a pack animal . Upon approaching the mule , a letter was discovered secured to the throatlatch of the bridle , which , being addressed to the

captain , ivas immediately handed into his quarters . Upon opening the letter , its contents ( written in the delicate handwriting of a female ) consisted of the following singular announcement : — "The Temple of Jerusalem was destroyed on the first Friday before the full moon . " The captain professed to understand it , and said , " The guerillas will attack the bridge to-night , " and immediately ordered the company to be mustered , and informed them of the imminence of an attack which might be looked for at any moment . Ammunition was

ordered to be distributed , the guards were doubled , pickets thrown out , and every precaution taken to guard against surprise . At the close of the day a drizzling rain set in , AA'hich continued until the next morning , causing the night to be intensely dark . Three picket stations had been thrown out into the country about half a mile from the opposite end of the

bridge , where the main guard was posted behind a pile of railroad ties . It was our lot to be one of the six that composed the midnight guard at this station . We had been upon our post about an hour when one of the men observed , " I bear footsteps . " We listened , and presently heard the footsteps of several persons approaching us , apparently with great cautionthrough a dense

under-, grovrth that skirted the opposite end of the road . The darkness of the night was so great that we could not see them even when they were within forty feet of us ; but ive could distinctly hear one of them observe in a petulant but suppressed tone , " Jim , hold up that gun of yours ; that ' s twice you ' ve stuck that bayonet in me . " At this moment we opened upon them with all our guns .

There' was no gun fired in return , but we could distinctly hear them for some time rushing with receding steps through the thicket , in the direction of a cornfield , in which stood a log cabin , occupied by a woman and two children , the husband and father of whom was a Union soldier in one of the Missouri regiments . The firing of our guns , which overshot the enemy , had aroused the entire command , and brought in the picket guard , when the log cabin alluded to was discovered to be on fire . Believing it to be the incendiary work of tbe

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