Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.
Ar01000
our Canadian Lodges is very critical ; and though a Colonial Board has been constituted , it will find no easy task in reuniting alienated affections , and in cementing a stable reconciliation . So easy is it to mismanage matters , so difficult to restore them to their orig inal condition . Had Lord Carnarvon ' s motion , which was
carried unanimously in the adjourned G . L . of the 1 st of October , been re-affirmed , Canada would have accepted it as an earnest of conciliation and redress , and the schism would probably have been healed . As the case now stands , the Canadian Lodges justly resent the uniform neglect with which they have been treated
by the Dais ; and in certain resolutions , which we commend to the careful perusal of our readers , they appeal henceforward from the G , M . to the G . L . of England ; If , as the Book of Constitutions says , G . L . is "
inherently supreme ; " if it has " the power of investigating , regulating , and deciding all matters relative to the Craft" ( p . 23 ); if it be a Court of " Appeal , " and " possesses the supreme superintending authority and the power of finally deciding in every case "( p . 88 ) , it is selfevident that G . L . both can and ought to entertain the
appeal submitted to it . Meanwhile we would earnestly entreat our Canadian Brethren to be patient yet awhile , and to believe that there are many in England who have recognized the justice of their claims , and will not li g htly abandon
their cause . Rome was not built in a day : and though the Executive opposes to every salutary measure the dead weight of a stolid resistance , yet truth is mighty and will prevail—if it be spoken fearlessly , and followed up practically by a vigorous common sense .
Ar01001
WE have a kindness for the occupants of the Dais , but the stronger our feelings for them , the more painful is the sight of the inconsistencies and entanglements into which they insist upon thrusting themselves . It was often discussed by ancient casuists whether a man could injure himself or no . We must confess to a
feeling of regret and almost shame to see so ready an affirmative given to the question by many of the Craft for whom personally we entertain a respect . Their mental organization is really an interesting study—a psychological phenomenon which is not often presented in the nineteenth century . They are our " raraavis , "
our Dodo—the relics of something which may have existed in another phase of human life , but which now perplexes men , baffles imitation , and sets the laws of
reasoning at defiance . Their artless belief in their own inherent right of governing , the simplicity of their faith in all the little devices to evade real points at issue , and to mask their intentions—devices so elaborate as regards themselves , so transparent to others—is really quite affecting . The Abyssinian Prince refused to believe in
the existence of ice which he had never seen ; they , on the other hand , cannot be persuaded that G . L ., which they do know and which they have so long adorned , is capable of any warmth or reality of feeling on any subject . In an age of incessant activity , where none can afford to be idle , they alone seem to indulge in the pleasant dream
of the lotos eaters : to think that , like the Epicurean gods of old , they may from their sublime pedestal look down in serene contempt upon the labours , the hopes , the anxieties of men , and dispense at will their smiles and thunders upon a submissive world . But , like all great
geniuses , they have one favourite hue of action , one grand expedient , which they hold in reserve . No error is so gross but that it may be redeemed by maintaining themselves and imposing on others an absolute silence . Napoleon held his Imperial Guard , Sir R . Walpole his
money-bags in reserve to carry the day when all else had failed ; but our worthy Brethren on the Dais are not content to use their social catapult once or twice , or even thrice . Forgetful of the words of the wise man , that there is a season for all things , they are always falling back upon this system of repression as the ne plus ultra
of their diplomacy . Their management of G . L . is a perpetual cottp d ' etat . They resemble the painter who could only paint a red lion . Whether the picture was large or small , sacred or profane , gay or serious ; whether it was to hang in a drawing room or a kitchen , the end
and object of his art was a red lion . So in G . L . ; whether it be a question of Canada or of the ri ght of adjournment , it is all one ; the answer is uniform—it is a matter of privilege—discussion is illegal . We rejoice to see that Bro . Benson ( J . W ., No . 10 ) has undertaken to move for a Committee to report upon
these matters of privilege and order . We have no desire to exceed by one inch our province as defined b y the Constitution ; but we are weary of walking in a mist surrounded by doubts and unrealities , aud continually warned that we are breaking some law or subverting some landmark .
Ar01002
ENGLISHMEN are eminently practical , and the necessity of a power in Grand Lodge to hold continuous
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.
Ar01000
our Canadian Lodges is very critical ; and though a Colonial Board has been constituted , it will find no easy task in reuniting alienated affections , and in cementing a stable reconciliation . So easy is it to mismanage matters , so difficult to restore them to their orig inal condition . Had Lord Carnarvon ' s motion , which was
carried unanimously in the adjourned G . L . of the 1 st of October , been re-affirmed , Canada would have accepted it as an earnest of conciliation and redress , and the schism would probably have been healed . As the case now stands , the Canadian Lodges justly resent the uniform neglect with which they have been treated
by the Dais ; and in certain resolutions , which we commend to the careful perusal of our readers , they appeal henceforward from the G , M . to the G . L . of England ; If , as the Book of Constitutions says , G . L . is "
inherently supreme ; " if it has " the power of investigating , regulating , and deciding all matters relative to the Craft" ( p . 23 ); if it be a Court of " Appeal , " and " possesses the supreme superintending authority and the power of finally deciding in every case "( p . 88 ) , it is selfevident that G . L . both can and ought to entertain the
appeal submitted to it . Meanwhile we would earnestly entreat our Canadian Brethren to be patient yet awhile , and to believe that there are many in England who have recognized the justice of their claims , and will not li g htly abandon
their cause . Rome was not built in a day : and though the Executive opposes to every salutary measure the dead weight of a stolid resistance , yet truth is mighty and will prevail—if it be spoken fearlessly , and followed up practically by a vigorous common sense .
Ar01001
WE have a kindness for the occupants of the Dais , but the stronger our feelings for them , the more painful is the sight of the inconsistencies and entanglements into which they insist upon thrusting themselves . It was often discussed by ancient casuists whether a man could injure himself or no . We must confess to a
feeling of regret and almost shame to see so ready an affirmative given to the question by many of the Craft for whom personally we entertain a respect . Their mental organization is really an interesting study—a psychological phenomenon which is not often presented in the nineteenth century . They are our " raraavis , "
our Dodo—the relics of something which may have existed in another phase of human life , but which now perplexes men , baffles imitation , and sets the laws of
reasoning at defiance . Their artless belief in their own inherent right of governing , the simplicity of their faith in all the little devices to evade real points at issue , and to mask their intentions—devices so elaborate as regards themselves , so transparent to others—is really quite affecting . The Abyssinian Prince refused to believe in
the existence of ice which he had never seen ; they , on the other hand , cannot be persuaded that G . L ., which they do know and which they have so long adorned , is capable of any warmth or reality of feeling on any subject . In an age of incessant activity , where none can afford to be idle , they alone seem to indulge in the pleasant dream
of the lotos eaters : to think that , like the Epicurean gods of old , they may from their sublime pedestal look down in serene contempt upon the labours , the hopes , the anxieties of men , and dispense at will their smiles and thunders upon a submissive world . But , like all great
geniuses , they have one favourite hue of action , one grand expedient , which they hold in reserve . No error is so gross but that it may be redeemed by maintaining themselves and imposing on others an absolute silence . Napoleon held his Imperial Guard , Sir R . Walpole his
money-bags in reserve to carry the day when all else had failed ; but our worthy Brethren on the Dais are not content to use their social catapult once or twice , or even thrice . Forgetful of the words of the wise man , that there is a season for all things , they are always falling back upon this system of repression as the ne plus ultra
of their diplomacy . Their management of G . L . is a perpetual cottp d ' etat . They resemble the painter who could only paint a red lion . Whether the picture was large or small , sacred or profane , gay or serious ; whether it was to hang in a drawing room or a kitchen , the end
and object of his art was a red lion . So in G . L . ; whether it be a question of Canada or of the ri ght of adjournment , it is all one ; the answer is uniform—it is a matter of privilege—discussion is illegal . We rejoice to see that Bro . Benson ( J . W ., No . 10 ) has undertaken to move for a Committee to report upon
these matters of privilege and order . We have no desire to exceed by one inch our province as defined b y the Constitution ; but we are weary of walking in a mist surrounded by doubts and unrealities , aud continually warned that we are breaking some law or subverting some landmark .
Ar01002
ENGLISHMEN are eminently practical , and the necessity of a power in Grand Lodge to hold continuous