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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Round And About.

Round and About .

If influenza attack you , and the fogs and mists of an unnatural winter get into your throat , drive over to London Bridge or Victoria , and train it to Brighton . You have done it , of course ! And did you ever find influenza , or fog , or mist , or unnatural winters there ? I went the other morning—not on pleasure bent ,

however . I struggled through the pitchy atmosphere of the City , and reached the station just as the twelve express was starting . Gradually we steamed through the damnable curtain of London , and rushed along through the sun-girdled fields of Sussex and the Downs . Was it winter at Brighton , I wondered ; and why we poor dwellers in the Metropolis should not be favored with the climatic luxuries of this sister of ours by the sea .

# * * West Brighton and East Brighton and Brighton itself liave changed since I used to be taken down there twice a year for the benefit of my nurse ' s health . Hundreds of houses have grown up a la South and West Kensington , upon ground that was fields and

meadows in my recollection , and the rattle of omnibuses continues from misty morn to dewy eve . A long way to the right from the station live a perfect horde of newspaper men and dilettanti , and if you are careful enough to inquire you will come across the residence of the Senior Grand Warden of Middlesex , who swears by Brighton

much as he swears b y no other part of the civilised world . The glories of the interior of this exteriorly unambitious house are too much for a modest " par" ; so you walk away with promised visions of an " At Home " a little later in the year , and ring not the bell that would admit you to one of the best men Brighton has ever housed .

* # # There are friends who must be seen , and you see them . There are some maiden aunts and bachelor uncles to be called upon , and you call upon them . There are respectable jarvies waiting for a fare , and you satisfy them . And then there is that walk along the

sea-front back to West-street—and , of course , you walk along it . You did not expect to run against William B ., but j-ou do ; and actually you meet William C , and just married , too . What a charming wife William C . seems to have . ' Good luck to you , " Billy ; " may your life beyond the mantle of the present be as jolly as it was with tlie old boj'S at Winchester . But , married , you dog ! What surprises there are in life !

* * * Coming home in tlie train—how many years is it since I came home from Brighton last ?—a seaside-looking old lady busies herself with writing on the backs of envelopes , which presently she distributes to the occupants of the carriage . I get one , and find

it is an exhortation to wash myself in the blood of the Lamb , and become whiter than snow . Dear old soul ! I am going to have that precious little sermon framed and hung up above my desk . I wonder how many rebuffs she gets in her quiet mission of welldoing !

* * * Some months ago I was possessed of a guinea which I promised to give to the neatest child at the Girls' Institution . I applied to the Matron , who referred me to the Secretary ; the Secretary referred the matter to the Committee , and there it ends . Perhaps in the dim future , when my hair is grey , and

1 totter down Great Queen-street to beg a copper and a crust from a Brother of a future generation , the Royal Masonic Institution for Girls will apply to me for that guinea , and I shudder when I think of what the interest will amount to ! And to think that I promised toi ^ ublish the portrait of the lucky maiden !

*¦*•* ¦ My contemporary of Queen-street , who studiously avoids mentioning the title of this journal , and never acknowledges its receipt —The Freemason—prints a very full resume of the last year ' s work

Round And About.

in the Craft . Its knowledge of Latin is unfortunately limited , and its acquaintance with English composition more so , but it otherwise carries out its purpose admirably . Its Lodge reports are full to overflowing , and this feature commands much respect from the Craft generally . We should not like to guess what Bro . Kenning loses each year over the publishing of his twenty-year-old "journal , "

but to give such a mass of printed matter—and matter which is the most expensive to set—for threepence , must mean a very serious deficit on each issue . But Bro . Kenning is rich , and perhaps he does all this for charity .

* * * Our printer failed to notice our corrections m the spelling of two certain writers on Masonic matters in our last issue . I regret his carelessness the more , because Bro . Hughan has expressed to us highly complimentary remarks upon the MASONIC REVIEW , and has

contributed an article which will appear in a future issue . Bro . Lane also reads our columns and sends us his books , and credits us with a knowledge of him beyond the influence of the underhousemaid at Bromley .

* * * Another of those functions which the unbounded generosity of the Drury-lane Lessee arranges from time to time for the entertainment of his friends , was held at Drury-lane on the 6 th inst , when tlie Baddeley Cake was successfully cut by Bro . Fernandez . Mr . Harris had invited a number of Masons , with the result that the

place was packed with Brethren , who drank the wines and devoured the food in the usual manner among Masons . In fact , it was to some extent a Gastronomic Exhibition . Bohemia , with its elite , filled the stalls and private boxes , and derived great pleasure from the spectacle of a thousand hungry and thirsty followers of the

Masonic Order struggling to reach the heavily-laden tables , and , as Mark Twain says , " get outside as much victuals as time permitted . "

* * * The Lord and Lady Mayoress looked in and stayed an hour . T . P . O'Connor brought two or three of his City followers , and looked a greater Irishman than ever . J . L . Toole was unhappy , but forgot his unhappiness as time wore on . The Lumleys were there , and a strong contingent from the Adelphi , including J . L . Shine ,

who was receiving a " lecture" in the stalls , to his evident amusement . Thorne the Younger and Mr . Alexander escorting Miss Neilson . Four constituencies of the Lower House were represented by their M . P . ' s , and the House of Lords peeped its head inside the auditorium and left . There were but a very few ladies

outside the profession , present . Miss Phyllis Broughton represented comic opera , Miss Sylvia Grey burlesque , and Miss Agnes Hewitt , with Miss Minnie Palmer , pantomime , and many lords of the financial world were in close attendance . The Guards' Band played " God Save the Queen" in the Rotunda about 3 . 30 , and everybody went home to bed .

* * * The pension business connected with the R . M . I , for Boys is again topsy-turvy , and all the haggling will , no doubt , begin over again . The Provisional Management Committee has addressed a circular note to the Craft containing the following : —

In view of the narrow majority by which the Resolution proposing to grant to Bro . Binckes a retiring allowance of . £ 350 per annum was carried at the last General Quarterly Court , the Provisional Management Committee has decided to ask the nest Quarterly Court not to confirm ov proceed further with that resolution , but To substitute in its place another to grant him / 250 per annum Whilst askmg with confidence for the grant of £ 250 annumthe

Pro-, per , visional Management Committee has considered and sanctioned a scheme to raise a fund of £ 2 , 500 in lieu of granting a pension to Bro . Binckes , styled the " Pension Indemnity Fund , R . M . Institution for Hoys , " the immediate object of which is to relieve altogether the Institution from any charge on its funds , and at the same time to recognise the services of Bro . Binckes and provide some means for his " honorable retirement" from the office of Secretary , after upwards of twenty-eight ' service

years The Provisional Management Committee has the pleasure to announce that a distinguished Brother , fully believing the generosity of the Craft will support the scheme , has munificently placed at the disposal of the Provisional Management Committee the sum of . £ 2 , 500 , to enable it to commute the proposed allowance of . £ 250 per annum and arrange at once with Bro . Binckes for his retirement , and to allow six months for the collection of the fund . The

“The Masonic Review: 1890-01-01, Page 2” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 11 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/msr/issues/msr_01011890/page/2/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
CONTENTS. Article 1
CHARITY. Article 1
Round and About. Article 2
Masonic Mems. Article 4
Untitled Article 8
Eminent Masons at Home. Article 8
THE SENIOR DEACON. Article 10
ROBERT BURNS AND FREEMASONRY. Article 11
Facts and Fancies. Article 12
Among the Bohemians. Article 14
Colonial and Foreign. Article 15
Gathered Chips. Article 16
Answers to Correspondents. Article 16
BOOKS AND PERIODICALS RECEIVED. Article 16
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Round And About.

Round and About .

If influenza attack you , and the fogs and mists of an unnatural winter get into your throat , drive over to London Bridge or Victoria , and train it to Brighton . You have done it , of course ! And did you ever find influenza , or fog , or mist , or unnatural winters there ? I went the other morning—not on pleasure bent ,

however . I struggled through the pitchy atmosphere of the City , and reached the station just as the twelve express was starting . Gradually we steamed through the damnable curtain of London , and rushed along through the sun-girdled fields of Sussex and the Downs . Was it winter at Brighton , I wondered ; and why we poor dwellers in the Metropolis should not be favored with the climatic luxuries of this sister of ours by the sea .

# * * West Brighton and East Brighton and Brighton itself liave changed since I used to be taken down there twice a year for the benefit of my nurse ' s health . Hundreds of houses have grown up a la South and West Kensington , upon ground that was fields and

meadows in my recollection , and the rattle of omnibuses continues from misty morn to dewy eve . A long way to the right from the station live a perfect horde of newspaper men and dilettanti , and if you are careful enough to inquire you will come across the residence of the Senior Grand Warden of Middlesex , who swears by Brighton

much as he swears b y no other part of the civilised world . The glories of the interior of this exteriorly unambitious house are too much for a modest " par" ; so you walk away with promised visions of an " At Home " a little later in the year , and ring not the bell that would admit you to one of the best men Brighton has ever housed .

* # # There are friends who must be seen , and you see them . There are some maiden aunts and bachelor uncles to be called upon , and you call upon them . There are respectable jarvies waiting for a fare , and you satisfy them . And then there is that walk along the

sea-front back to West-street—and , of course , you walk along it . You did not expect to run against William B ., but j-ou do ; and actually you meet William C , and just married , too . What a charming wife William C . seems to have . ' Good luck to you , " Billy ; " may your life beyond the mantle of the present be as jolly as it was with tlie old boj'S at Winchester . But , married , you dog ! What surprises there are in life !

* * * Coming home in tlie train—how many years is it since I came home from Brighton last ?—a seaside-looking old lady busies herself with writing on the backs of envelopes , which presently she distributes to the occupants of the carriage . I get one , and find

it is an exhortation to wash myself in the blood of the Lamb , and become whiter than snow . Dear old soul ! I am going to have that precious little sermon framed and hung up above my desk . I wonder how many rebuffs she gets in her quiet mission of welldoing !

* * * Some months ago I was possessed of a guinea which I promised to give to the neatest child at the Girls' Institution . I applied to the Matron , who referred me to the Secretary ; the Secretary referred the matter to the Committee , and there it ends . Perhaps in the dim future , when my hair is grey , and

1 totter down Great Queen-street to beg a copper and a crust from a Brother of a future generation , the Royal Masonic Institution for Girls will apply to me for that guinea , and I shudder when I think of what the interest will amount to ! And to think that I promised toi ^ ublish the portrait of the lucky maiden !

*¦*•* ¦ My contemporary of Queen-street , who studiously avoids mentioning the title of this journal , and never acknowledges its receipt —The Freemason—prints a very full resume of the last year ' s work

Round And About.

in the Craft . Its knowledge of Latin is unfortunately limited , and its acquaintance with English composition more so , but it otherwise carries out its purpose admirably . Its Lodge reports are full to overflowing , and this feature commands much respect from the Craft generally . We should not like to guess what Bro . Kenning loses each year over the publishing of his twenty-year-old "journal , "

but to give such a mass of printed matter—and matter which is the most expensive to set—for threepence , must mean a very serious deficit on each issue . But Bro . Kenning is rich , and perhaps he does all this for charity .

* * * Our printer failed to notice our corrections m the spelling of two certain writers on Masonic matters in our last issue . I regret his carelessness the more , because Bro . Hughan has expressed to us highly complimentary remarks upon the MASONIC REVIEW , and has

contributed an article which will appear in a future issue . Bro . Lane also reads our columns and sends us his books , and credits us with a knowledge of him beyond the influence of the underhousemaid at Bromley .

* * * Another of those functions which the unbounded generosity of the Drury-lane Lessee arranges from time to time for the entertainment of his friends , was held at Drury-lane on the 6 th inst , when tlie Baddeley Cake was successfully cut by Bro . Fernandez . Mr . Harris had invited a number of Masons , with the result that the

place was packed with Brethren , who drank the wines and devoured the food in the usual manner among Masons . In fact , it was to some extent a Gastronomic Exhibition . Bohemia , with its elite , filled the stalls and private boxes , and derived great pleasure from the spectacle of a thousand hungry and thirsty followers of the

Masonic Order struggling to reach the heavily-laden tables , and , as Mark Twain says , " get outside as much victuals as time permitted . "

* * * The Lord and Lady Mayoress looked in and stayed an hour . T . P . O'Connor brought two or three of his City followers , and looked a greater Irishman than ever . J . L . Toole was unhappy , but forgot his unhappiness as time wore on . The Lumleys were there , and a strong contingent from the Adelphi , including J . L . Shine ,

who was receiving a " lecture" in the stalls , to his evident amusement . Thorne the Younger and Mr . Alexander escorting Miss Neilson . Four constituencies of the Lower House were represented by their M . P . ' s , and the House of Lords peeped its head inside the auditorium and left . There were but a very few ladies

outside the profession , present . Miss Phyllis Broughton represented comic opera , Miss Sylvia Grey burlesque , and Miss Agnes Hewitt , with Miss Minnie Palmer , pantomime , and many lords of the financial world were in close attendance . The Guards' Band played " God Save the Queen" in the Rotunda about 3 . 30 , and everybody went home to bed .

* * * The pension business connected with the R . M . I , for Boys is again topsy-turvy , and all the haggling will , no doubt , begin over again . The Provisional Management Committee has addressed a circular note to the Craft containing the following : —

In view of the narrow majority by which the Resolution proposing to grant to Bro . Binckes a retiring allowance of . £ 350 per annum was carried at the last General Quarterly Court , the Provisional Management Committee has decided to ask the nest Quarterly Court not to confirm ov proceed further with that resolution , but To substitute in its place another to grant him / 250 per annum Whilst askmg with confidence for the grant of £ 250 annumthe

Pro-, per , visional Management Committee has considered and sanctioned a scheme to raise a fund of £ 2 , 500 in lieu of granting a pension to Bro . Binckes , styled the " Pension Indemnity Fund , R . M . Institution for Hoys , " the immediate object of which is to relieve altogether the Institution from any charge on its funds , and at the same time to recognise the services of Bro . Binckes and provide some means for his " honorable retirement" from the office of Secretary , after upwards of twenty-eight ' service

years The Provisional Management Committee has the pleasure to announce that a distinguished Brother , fully believing the generosity of the Craft will support the scheme , has munificently placed at the disposal of the Provisional Management Committee the sum of . £ 2 , 500 , to enable it to commute the proposed allowance of . £ 250 per annum and arrange at once with Bro . Binckes for his retirement , and to allow six months for the collection of the fund . The

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