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  • The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine
  • Dec. 28, 1861
  • Page 4
  • NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART.
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, Dec. 28, 1861: Page 4

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Notes On Literature, Science, And Art.

" after a few years practice in extempore preaching , he acquired a faculty for addressing the prisoners in a manner which secured their absorbed attention . The spectacle of those two or three hundred upturned faces—blotched , sin-stricken , ugly faces , generally- —staring- with half-stolid animal-like fixedness at the preacher was one not easily forgotten . Few men , probably , could have east such a spell as he did over an audience so dull-brained , so incapable

of following the simplest argument . But the chief thing to be noticed was the honest means by which he gained their ears . 'I never heard anything so logical from a pulpit before , ' was the remark of a very competent judge after hearing him preach . Probably what the critic meant was that he had never heard such a single topic sermon ; for this epithet , in default of a better , may be coined to describe his style . 'It is my plan , ' was his own account of his sermons'to he content with one idea ; that is quite

, as much as my poor people can take in at once ; hut I try to enunciate my one idea as distinctly and as completely as possible . My endeavour is to keep out all other subjects , wnieh would only embarass them , and to make all my reasons aud illustrations fit together , so as to build up one single compact notion for them to carry away . ' To an educated hearer the impression left hy his sermons was , that he had brought some old familiar truth hitherto hut dimly seen ( as through an iil-focussed telescope ) into sharp

clear distinctness ; and the influence was , that the most stupid in the chapel , however irreceptive , would understand the meaning in some vague way at all events . The sermons were so' fluent , so nearly eloquent , that one peculiarity would probably escape an uncritical listener—the scanty use of any words but monosyllables . The number of words , too , that were employed , was extremely small , yet the language never seemed bald and meagre . In fact , his greatest difficulty was to find words that the prisoners could

comprehend . It was his often-expressed opinion , that the vocabularies of many prisoners did not contain a hundred words , beyond those expressive of their animal wants , aud those belonging to their trades , "

AVe are sorry to have to record tho death of one of the benefactor . - of his kind . —Dr . Southwood Smith , the well-known English sanitary reformer , author of Illustrations of the Divine Government of the World , and other works . The doctor died at Florence , and was in the seventy-fourth year of his age . The fourth and last volume of the History of TEugland , by Mr . Massey , Jlf . P ., is announced for publication early in the Spring .

Correspondence.

CORRESPONDENCE .

The T 7 ditor 1 . not- responsible for the opinions __ . - »/•____ , by Correspondents . TO mi : r . siroi ; or THE rREE _ t _ . so :, -s' JIAGAZIXI : A _ . I . __ . _ so _ . ic -rinnou . DEAR Snt A >" D BEOTHEE . —Your remarks on the Grand Registrar , and that he should in the Provinces be , as in Grand

Lodge , a lawyer , and not as too often , anything else but a lawyer , has brought to my recollection a question raised by our Dep . Prov . G . Master , on the status of Tylers . Our Deputy is a lawyer , and Prov . Grand Registrar is not one ; but he is , notwithstanding , a good working Mason , and perhaps in Masonic law quite equal to any of our brethren learned in the law . But though these worthbrethren are

y not well up in Masonic law , I still would rather see a lawyer Prov . Grand Registrar , than an architect or a shi pbrokev ; for the first can soon master Masonic law , and can better apply it ; while the latter will have greater difficulty in doing so . Well , from the report in your paper of the 16 th " Nov ., The Deputy Prov . Grand Master cf this province is reported

to have said : — " He ( the D . Prov . Grand Master ) , was asked whether the Tylers of lodges were to be returned to Grand Lodge ancl Provincial Grand Lodge , as any other member , and if so returned , ivhether that constituted them members of the lodge in which they acted as Tylers ? His reply was that the constitutions were not clear on that pointand being serving

, brethren , they had no right to be returned . " " Bro . Davis , _ P . Prov . S . G . W ., stated that Tylers were not considered serving brethren , though receiving a salary for their services . But he agreed that thc Constitutions were not clear upon the point whether Tylers were members or

not , and if they enjoyed all the privileges of members . He was glad the subject was mentioned , for perhaps the higher authorities might take some means of explaining the point . " Seeing , Sir , two such high authorities differing , the one a lawyer , the othera P . Prov . Registrar , and justly considered one of themost learned Masonic brethren in this province , and whose opinion on our laws and practices is seldom at fault ,

it behoved your correspondent , and others like him , to think well before they threw any light on such a contradictory statement as the above . I therefore , made a note of the point , and decided to look into it , and to see ivhether the opinion I always understood , that the Constitutions and our practices refering to the status of Tylers was not correct , and should there be any

further doubt- on the subject , to put the question at once to head quarters . Other matters prevented me committing to paper my thoughts on this subject till your observations on Grand Registrars , in your impression of the 21 sfe inst ., called my attention again to this point . I think , Sir , if j-ou will allow me to quote Er . Oliver ' s

Masonic jurisprudence , under the heading " The Assistant Officers , " at page 111—a complete answer to this question will be found . Dr . Olliver , says : — " The Tyler . —The Tyler , or outer guard , whose business it is to keep off all listeners and cowans to Masonry , ancl see that no brother approach the exterior avenues of the lodge without being duly prepared , is , in reality , a serving brother

— although an essential assistant officer—who receives a stated salary for performing the duties of his office . His jewel , or cognisance , is a sword . The laws relating to this officer are peculiarly stringent . He is chosen annually by the members , who may remove him at pleasure , if he conducts himself improperly , or violates the laws of Masonrv ,

by a majority of votes at any regular lodge , due notice having been given in the summonses , that every brother may be cognisant of the proceedings against him ; and , being so dismissed , he is for ever excluded from the benefit of the charities . ' - ' This officer is not a member of the lodge , and consequently does not subscribe to the funds . He is without

the camp , and his services are remunerated by a pecuniaryrecompense ; but so long as he retains his office , and preserves an unsullied reputation , he is not only entitled to casual Masonic relief , but also to be elected as an annuitant on the Royal Benevolent Institution . " The Constitutions say , under the head of Tylers : — " The Tylers are to be chosen by the members of the lodge , and .

may at any time be removed for causes deemed sufficient by a majority of the brethren present . " Therefore , if he was considered a member , or like one of the other officers , he could not be removed in this summary manner . Neither is he considered like the Secretary , who also , in some lodges , is a paid officer . For under thc Chapter of Grand Fund of Benevolence , it is stated : — " Secretaries , who arc by their lodges exempt from the payment of subscriptions , shall not thereby be disaitalified

from obtaining assistance from , the Fund of Benevolence , but shall be considered as subscribing members of their lodges , their services being equivalent to subscriptions . " Consequently , the rules applicable to Tylers in being returned to the Grand Lodge and Prov . Grand Lodge will necessarily be that applicable to serving brethren , ivhich distinctly states that they cannot be members of the lodge

in ivhich they serve ; but " are eligible as a subscribing member of any other lodge , aud upon being registered , as a joining member of such other lodge , and paying his contributions in like manner with other members , he is entitled to all the ' privileges and benefits of the Craft . "—( Vide Constitutions Proposing , Members , Sec . 9 ) . Again , speaking of the Inner Guard , Dr . Oliver says , in

the same work , page 143 , " If he be a salaried and serving brother , he is entirely destitute of cither rights or privileges" ( of a subscribing member ) . It follows from the above that if my quotations and arguments are correct , according to the constitutions of the general Masonic practice , Tylers of lodges are in reality serving brethren , being paid for their services , and as such , the lodges iu which they serve are not bound to make returns of them to Grand Lod ge and Provincial Grand

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1861-12-28, Page 4” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 12 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_28121861/page/4/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
MASONIC FACTS. Article 1
THE LODGE OF BENEVOLENCE. Article 1
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 2
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART. Article 2
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 4
THE TEMPLE AND THE GRAND CONCLAVE. Article 5
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 6
METROPOLITAN. Article 6
PROVINCIAL. Article 8
AUSTRALIA. Article 9
ROYAL ARCH. Article 10
KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. Article 10
MARK MASONRY. Article 10
MASONIC FESTIVITIES. Article 10
Obituary. Article 11
LINES, Article 11
THE WEEK. Article 11
SPECIAL NOTICE. Article 12
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 12
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Notes On Literature, Science, And Art.

" after a few years practice in extempore preaching , he acquired a faculty for addressing the prisoners in a manner which secured their absorbed attention . The spectacle of those two or three hundred upturned faces—blotched , sin-stricken , ugly faces , generally- —staring- with half-stolid animal-like fixedness at the preacher was one not easily forgotten . Few men , probably , could have east such a spell as he did over an audience so dull-brained , so incapable

of following the simplest argument . But the chief thing to be noticed was the honest means by which he gained their ears . 'I never heard anything so logical from a pulpit before , ' was the remark of a very competent judge after hearing him preach . Probably what the critic meant was that he had never heard such a single topic sermon ; for this epithet , in default of a better , may be coined to describe his style . 'It is my plan , ' was his own account of his sermons'to he content with one idea ; that is quite

, as much as my poor people can take in at once ; hut I try to enunciate my one idea as distinctly and as completely as possible . My endeavour is to keep out all other subjects , wnieh would only embarass them , and to make all my reasons aud illustrations fit together , so as to build up one single compact notion for them to carry away . ' To an educated hearer the impression left hy his sermons was , that he had brought some old familiar truth hitherto hut dimly seen ( as through an iil-focussed telescope ) into sharp

clear distinctness ; and the influence was , that the most stupid in the chapel , however irreceptive , would understand the meaning in some vague way at all events . The sermons were so' fluent , so nearly eloquent , that one peculiarity would probably escape an uncritical listener—the scanty use of any words but monosyllables . The number of words , too , that were employed , was extremely small , yet the language never seemed bald and meagre . In fact , his greatest difficulty was to find words that the prisoners could

comprehend . It was his often-expressed opinion , that the vocabularies of many prisoners did not contain a hundred words , beyond those expressive of their animal wants , aud those belonging to their trades , "

AVe are sorry to have to record tho death of one of the benefactor . - of his kind . —Dr . Southwood Smith , the well-known English sanitary reformer , author of Illustrations of the Divine Government of the World , and other works . The doctor died at Florence , and was in the seventy-fourth year of his age . The fourth and last volume of the History of TEugland , by Mr . Massey , Jlf . P ., is announced for publication early in the Spring .

Correspondence.

CORRESPONDENCE .

The T 7 ditor 1 . not- responsible for the opinions __ . - »/•____ , by Correspondents . TO mi : r . siroi ; or THE rREE _ t _ . so :, -s' JIAGAZIXI : A _ . I . __ . _ so _ . ic -rinnou . DEAR Snt A >" D BEOTHEE . —Your remarks on the Grand Registrar , and that he should in the Provinces be , as in Grand

Lodge , a lawyer , and not as too often , anything else but a lawyer , has brought to my recollection a question raised by our Dep . Prov . G . Master , on the status of Tylers . Our Deputy is a lawyer , and Prov . Grand Registrar is not one ; but he is , notwithstanding , a good working Mason , and perhaps in Masonic law quite equal to any of our brethren learned in the law . But though these worthbrethren are

y not well up in Masonic law , I still would rather see a lawyer Prov . Grand Registrar , than an architect or a shi pbrokev ; for the first can soon master Masonic law , and can better apply it ; while the latter will have greater difficulty in doing so . Well , from the report in your paper of the 16 th " Nov ., The Deputy Prov . Grand Master cf this province is reported

to have said : — " He ( the D . Prov . Grand Master ) , was asked whether the Tylers of lodges were to be returned to Grand Lodge ancl Provincial Grand Lodge , as any other member , and if so returned , ivhether that constituted them members of the lodge in which they acted as Tylers ? His reply was that the constitutions were not clear on that pointand being serving

, brethren , they had no right to be returned . " " Bro . Davis , _ P . Prov . S . G . W ., stated that Tylers were not considered serving brethren , though receiving a salary for their services . But he agreed that thc Constitutions were not clear upon the point whether Tylers were members or

not , and if they enjoyed all the privileges of members . He was glad the subject was mentioned , for perhaps the higher authorities might take some means of explaining the point . " Seeing , Sir , two such high authorities differing , the one a lawyer , the othera P . Prov . Registrar , and justly considered one of themost learned Masonic brethren in this province , and whose opinion on our laws and practices is seldom at fault ,

it behoved your correspondent , and others like him , to think well before they threw any light on such a contradictory statement as the above . I therefore , made a note of the point , and decided to look into it , and to see ivhether the opinion I always understood , that the Constitutions and our practices refering to the status of Tylers was not correct , and should there be any

further doubt- on the subject , to put the question at once to head quarters . Other matters prevented me committing to paper my thoughts on this subject till your observations on Grand Registrars , in your impression of the 21 sfe inst ., called my attention again to this point . I think , Sir , if j-ou will allow me to quote Er . Oliver ' s

Masonic jurisprudence , under the heading " The Assistant Officers , " at page 111—a complete answer to this question will be found . Dr . Olliver , says : — " The Tyler . —The Tyler , or outer guard , whose business it is to keep off all listeners and cowans to Masonry , ancl see that no brother approach the exterior avenues of the lodge without being duly prepared , is , in reality , a serving brother

— although an essential assistant officer—who receives a stated salary for performing the duties of his office . His jewel , or cognisance , is a sword . The laws relating to this officer are peculiarly stringent . He is chosen annually by the members , who may remove him at pleasure , if he conducts himself improperly , or violates the laws of Masonrv ,

by a majority of votes at any regular lodge , due notice having been given in the summonses , that every brother may be cognisant of the proceedings against him ; and , being so dismissed , he is for ever excluded from the benefit of the charities . ' - ' This officer is not a member of the lodge , and consequently does not subscribe to the funds . He is without

the camp , and his services are remunerated by a pecuniaryrecompense ; but so long as he retains his office , and preserves an unsullied reputation , he is not only entitled to casual Masonic relief , but also to be elected as an annuitant on the Royal Benevolent Institution . " The Constitutions say , under the head of Tylers : — " The Tylers are to be chosen by the members of the lodge , and .

may at any time be removed for causes deemed sufficient by a majority of the brethren present . " Therefore , if he was considered a member , or like one of the other officers , he could not be removed in this summary manner . Neither is he considered like the Secretary , who also , in some lodges , is a paid officer . For under thc Chapter of Grand Fund of Benevolence , it is stated : — " Secretaries , who arc by their lodges exempt from the payment of subscriptions , shall not thereby be disaitalified

from obtaining assistance from , the Fund of Benevolence , but shall be considered as subscribing members of their lodges , their services being equivalent to subscriptions . " Consequently , the rules applicable to Tylers in being returned to the Grand Lodge and Prov . Grand Lodge will necessarily be that applicable to serving brethren , ivhich distinctly states that they cannot be members of the lodge

in ivhich they serve ; but " are eligible as a subscribing member of any other lodge , aud upon being registered , as a joining member of such other lodge , and paying his contributions in like manner with other members , he is entitled to all the ' privileges and benefits of the Craft . "—( Vide Constitutions Proposing , Members , Sec . 9 ) . Again , speaking of the Inner Guard , Dr . Oliver says , in

the same work , page 143 , " If he be a salaried and serving brother , he is entirely destitute of cither rights or privileges" ( of a subscribing member ) . It follows from the above that if my quotations and arguments are correct , according to the constitutions of the general Masonic practice , Tylers of lodges are in reality serving brethren , being paid for their services , and as such , the lodges iu which they serve are not bound to make returns of them to Grand Lod ge and Provincial Grand

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