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  • March 1, 1890
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The Masonic Review, March 1, 1890: Page 12

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    Article GRAND LODGE OF SCOTLAND. ← Page 2 of 2
    Article Facts and Fancies. Page 1 of 2 →
Page 12

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Grand Lodge Of Scotland.

quarterly communication held at Bombay on December 2 last , and presided over by the M . W . Grand Master , Bro . Sir Henry Morland . The reception was followed by a grand banquet , at which were seated Europeans , Parsees , and Hindoos of all sects and denominations , Mohammedans and Jews , extending to each other the right hand of fellowship . Sir Henry Morland occupied the chair , and

conducted the proceedings with great tact and ability . On the recommendation of the District Grand Lodge of Canterbury , New Zealand , it was agreed to appoint Bro . Charles Louisson , Mayor of Christchurch , to the office of D . G . Master , in room of Bro . the Rev . James Hill resigned .

The minutes of the Grand Committee contained the report of the Auditor , Mr . Francis A . Bringloe , C . A ., on the funds of Grand Lodge . The Auditor stated that he found everything accurately stated , and sufficiently vouched and instructed . The fund and estate

belonging to , and under the control of , the Grand Lodge amounted at November 28 , 1 SS 9 , to ^" 31 , 680 . 12 s . 3 d . The accountant also examined and audited the accounts of the Fund of Scottish Masonic Benevolence for the same period , and reported that the fund at

November 28 , 1 SS 9 , amounted to ^ 6 , 794 . 5 s . 5 d . There was also appended an abstract account of the annuity branch of the Fund of Scottish Masonic Benevolence . The fund at November 28 , 1889 , amounted to ^ 3 , 465 . 3 s . 4 d ., whereof the sum of ^ 3 , 139 . 8 s . iid . is capital , and ^ 325 . 15 s . 2 J , d . is income . The accounts of Grand

Lodge for tlie year ending November 28 , 1889 , exhibit a further sum of ^ 1 , 394 . 14 s . 6 d . as due to this fund at that date , and which amount will appear in next account . In conclusion , the accountant hopes that it is within his province to record in this report an expression of the manner in which the duties appertaining to Grand

Cashier ' s department were conducted and supervised by the Grand Secretary during the prolonged illness of the late Bro . Kinnear , and subsequent to the date of his death . The meeting elected thirteen members to the Grand Committee . The Brethren elected to the Committee , and the votes which

each received , are as follows : —Bros . Colin Gallatly , 310 ; John B . M'Naught , 2 S 4 ; James T . S . Elliot of Wolfelee , 2 S 2 ; David Sneddon , 277 ; James Boyd , 269 ; Robert King Stewart of Murdostoun Castle , 251 ; Charles Baxter , Stwd ., 249 ; James Berry , 230 ; James Carmichael , M . D ., 227 ; James Reid , 226 ; George C . Douglas , 219 ; John Davidson , 183 ; and William J . C . Abbott ,

179 . Tlie following are the positions in the poll of the other eight gentlemen voted upon : —Bros . Thomas Bennett , 159 ; Robert Macfarlan , 149 ; James Thomson , 140 ; David Cuthbert , S . S . C ., 112 ; General John James Boswell , uo ; A . W . Rennie , 95 ; D . Hill , 90 ; and Robert Heys , G 2 .

The Committee of Management of the Royal Masonic Benevolent Institution held their regular monthly meeting at tlie Freemasons ' Hall , on Wednesday , the 12 th ult . Bro . Henry Smith , P . G . D ., D . P . G . M . West Yorkshire , occupied the chair . Tlie minutes of the previous meeting , and of that of the 29 th Jan ., having been read and confirmed , the Secretary reported the deaths of three male and

two female annuitants , as well as of five accepted male candidates . He also read letters relative to the candidature of four widows , two of whose names were directed to be removed from the list . The Wardens' report for the past month was read , and an application from the widow of a deceased annuitant to be granted the half of

her late husband ' s annuity was granted . The approved lists were settled , and the vacancies to be filled at the election in May were declared as follows : —G 8 male candidates , and 11 immediate vacancies , and 3 deferred , making together 14 to be elected ; and 83 widow candidates , with 7 immediate vacancies , and 3 deferred ,

or together 10 to be elected—the total for the two funds being 151 candidates , with 18 immediate and 6 deferred annuitants , or together 24 to be elected . A vote of thanks to the chairman terminated the proceedings .

Facts And Fancies.

Facts and Fancies .

BRO . WALTER BESANT ( QUATUOR CORONAT 1 ) . IT has been reserved to few novelists to obtain in their lifetime so wide a popularity as has been deservedly achieved by the author of " All Sorts and Conditions of Men . " This popularity is not so much due to any extraordinary literary merit- —as a novelist

Bro . Besant must rank far below George Meredith or Louis Stevenson—as to his many-sided activities , his never - failing sympathy for the sufferings of the toiling millions , and more than all , to the straightforward , healthy tone of his stories , which can be comprehended alike by the simplest and strongest minds . Bro .

Besant was born at Portsmouth in 1838 . He was educated at King ' s College in London , and afterwards proceeded to Christ College , Cambridge , where he had , amongst others , as college companions the late Mr . Calverly and Prof . Skeat . He graduated in high mathematical honors , and intended to go into the Church , but

later on he abandoned all idea of this career , and was appointed Senior Professor in the Royal College of Mauritius . Ill-health , however , compelled him to resign this appointment , and he returned to England and settled down to literary work , in which he lias been

actively engaged ever since . He produced his first book ( " Studies in Early French Poetry " ) in 1868 , and has devoted a good deal of time to the study of French literature , subsequently writing " French Humourists " and " Rabelais , " for whose genius he has a great admiration . Bro . Besant ' s earlier novels were written in conjunction with the late James Rice , and those who are interested in

this literary partnership should read the account of it given by the author of " All Sorts and Conditions of Men " in the preface to that book . There is a marked difference in the novels produced by the two novelists and those that have been since written by Bro . Besant alone , very much , in the opinion of many , to the

disadvantage of the later ones . " Ready-Money Mortiboy , " " The Golden ButterBy , " "My Little Girl , " and , above all , " The Chaplain of the Fleet , " are excellent novels , full of humor , incident , character-drawing , and good dialogue . The Chaplain , in "The Chaplain of the Fleet , " and Gilead Beck , in " The Golden Butterfly , " are as successfully-drawn characters as any that can be found in modern fiction . But in his later novels Bro . Besant has trodden

new ground ; and there can be no doubt that tnough philanthropy has been the gainer for this new departure , his novels as works of art have distinctly suffered . The artist has for the time b-: ing become lost in the philanthropist , and though the author of " All Sorts and Conditions of Men " may point proudly to the People ' s Palace as a lasting monument to the novelist ' s power , yet we would

ask him now to forsake " philanthropic" novels and give us one of his old ones , which shall amuse and cheer and delight . One perfect little story Bro . Besant has given us in recent yearsthe one called "Julia , " which appeared in Maciiiillans , and tells of a girl who did bookbinding by day and ballet-dancing by night . A

more exquisitely true and touching little story has , perhaps , never been written in modern times , and shows that Bro . Besant is a master of the difficult art of short story-telling . But Bro . Besant is not only a writer of novels . There is hardly any human movement of any kind in which he is not interested ; and it is nothing

less than wonderful that a busy writer should find time and inclination for interests of so varied a kind . As a trustee of the People ' s Palace , he has taken an immense part in the organisation of the Library ; and in the first year of its existence he went down regularly once a week , often two , and even three times , if

necessary—no small effort when it is remembered that a railway journey to Mile-end involves the best part of an afternoon . The present writer saw in these days a good deal of him , and can testify that in the not too smooth path of a trustee Bro . Besant always exhibited a kindness , consideration , and geniality of temper which were gratefully recognised by all those who had to work there . It is only lately that Bro . Besant has resigned the

“The Masonic Review: 1890-03-01, Page 12” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 30 March 2023, masonicperiodicals.org/periodicals/msr/issues/msr_01031890/page/12/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
CONTENTS. Article 1
Untitled Article 1
CONSECRATION OF THE UNIVERSITIES LODGE. Article 1
Round and About. Article 2
Masonic Mems. Article 4
Untitled Article 8
Eminent Masons at Home. Article 8
THE INNER AND OUTER GUARDS. Article 9
UNITED GRAND LODGE. Article 11
GRAND LODGE OF SCOTLAND. Article 11
Facts and Fancies. Article 12
Among the Bohemians. Article 14
Colonial and Foreign. Article 15
Gathered Chips. Article 15
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.

Grand Lodge Of Scotland.

quarterly communication held at Bombay on December 2 last , and presided over by the M . W . Grand Master , Bro . Sir Henry Morland . The reception was followed by a grand banquet , at which were seated Europeans , Parsees , and Hindoos of all sects and denominations , Mohammedans and Jews , extending to each other the right hand of fellowship . Sir Henry Morland occupied the chair , and

conducted the proceedings with great tact and ability . On the recommendation of the District Grand Lodge of Canterbury , New Zealand , it was agreed to appoint Bro . Charles Louisson , Mayor of Christchurch , to the office of D . G . Master , in room of Bro . the Rev . James Hill resigned .

The minutes of the Grand Committee contained the report of the Auditor , Mr . Francis A . Bringloe , C . A ., on the funds of Grand Lodge . The Auditor stated that he found everything accurately stated , and sufficiently vouched and instructed . The fund and estate

belonging to , and under the control of , the Grand Lodge amounted at November 28 , 1 SS 9 , to ^" 31 , 680 . 12 s . 3 d . The accountant also examined and audited the accounts of the Fund of Scottish Masonic Benevolence for the same period , and reported that the fund at

November 28 , 1 SS 9 , amounted to ^ 6 , 794 . 5 s . 5 d . There was also appended an abstract account of the annuity branch of the Fund of Scottish Masonic Benevolence . The fund at November 28 , 1889 , amounted to ^ 3 , 465 . 3 s . 4 d ., whereof the sum of ^ 3 , 139 . 8 s . iid . is capital , and ^ 325 . 15 s . 2 J , d . is income . The accounts of Grand

Lodge for tlie year ending November 28 , 1889 , exhibit a further sum of ^ 1 , 394 . 14 s . 6 d . as due to this fund at that date , and which amount will appear in next account . In conclusion , the accountant hopes that it is within his province to record in this report an expression of the manner in which the duties appertaining to Grand

Cashier ' s department were conducted and supervised by the Grand Secretary during the prolonged illness of the late Bro . Kinnear , and subsequent to the date of his death . The meeting elected thirteen members to the Grand Committee . The Brethren elected to the Committee , and the votes which

each received , are as follows : —Bros . Colin Gallatly , 310 ; John B . M'Naught , 2 S 4 ; James T . S . Elliot of Wolfelee , 2 S 2 ; David Sneddon , 277 ; James Boyd , 269 ; Robert King Stewart of Murdostoun Castle , 251 ; Charles Baxter , Stwd ., 249 ; James Berry , 230 ; James Carmichael , M . D ., 227 ; James Reid , 226 ; George C . Douglas , 219 ; John Davidson , 183 ; and William J . C . Abbott ,

179 . Tlie following are the positions in the poll of the other eight gentlemen voted upon : —Bros . Thomas Bennett , 159 ; Robert Macfarlan , 149 ; James Thomson , 140 ; David Cuthbert , S . S . C ., 112 ; General John James Boswell , uo ; A . W . Rennie , 95 ; D . Hill , 90 ; and Robert Heys , G 2 .

The Committee of Management of the Royal Masonic Benevolent Institution held their regular monthly meeting at tlie Freemasons ' Hall , on Wednesday , the 12 th ult . Bro . Henry Smith , P . G . D ., D . P . G . M . West Yorkshire , occupied the chair . Tlie minutes of the previous meeting , and of that of the 29 th Jan ., having been read and confirmed , the Secretary reported the deaths of three male and

two female annuitants , as well as of five accepted male candidates . He also read letters relative to the candidature of four widows , two of whose names were directed to be removed from the list . The Wardens' report for the past month was read , and an application from the widow of a deceased annuitant to be granted the half of

her late husband ' s annuity was granted . The approved lists were settled , and the vacancies to be filled at the election in May were declared as follows : —G 8 male candidates , and 11 immediate vacancies , and 3 deferred , making together 14 to be elected ; and 83 widow candidates , with 7 immediate vacancies , and 3 deferred ,

or together 10 to be elected—the total for the two funds being 151 candidates , with 18 immediate and 6 deferred annuitants , or together 24 to be elected . A vote of thanks to the chairman terminated the proceedings .

Facts And Fancies.

Facts and Fancies .

BRO . WALTER BESANT ( QUATUOR CORONAT 1 ) . IT has been reserved to few novelists to obtain in their lifetime so wide a popularity as has been deservedly achieved by the author of " All Sorts and Conditions of Men . " This popularity is not so much due to any extraordinary literary merit- —as a novelist

Bro . Besant must rank far below George Meredith or Louis Stevenson—as to his many-sided activities , his never - failing sympathy for the sufferings of the toiling millions , and more than all , to the straightforward , healthy tone of his stories , which can be comprehended alike by the simplest and strongest minds . Bro .

Besant was born at Portsmouth in 1838 . He was educated at King ' s College in London , and afterwards proceeded to Christ College , Cambridge , where he had , amongst others , as college companions the late Mr . Calverly and Prof . Skeat . He graduated in high mathematical honors , and intended to go into the Church , but

later on he abandoned all idea of this career , and was appointed Senior Professor in the Royal College of Mauritius . Ill-health , however , compelled him to resign this appointment , and he returned to England and settled down to literary work , in which he lias been

actively engaged ever since . He produced his first book ( " Studies in Early French Poetry " ) in 1868 , and has devoted a good deal of time to the study of French literature , subsequently writing " French Humourists " and " Rabelais , " for whose genius he has a great admiration . Bro . Besant ' s earlier novels were written in conjunction with the late James Rice , and those who are interested in

this literary partnership should read the account of it given by the author of " All Sorts and Conditions of Men " in the preface to that book . There is a marked difference in the novels produced by the two novelists and those that have been since written by Bro . Besant alone , very much , in the opinion of many , to the

disadvantage of the later ones . " Ready-Money Mortiboy , " " The Golden ButterBy , " "My Little Girl , " and , above all , " The Chaplain of the Fleet , " are excellent novels , full of humor , incident , character-drawing , and good dialogue . The Chaplain , in "The Chaplain of the Fleet , " and Gilead Beck , in " The Golden Butterfly , " are as successfully-drawn characters as any that can be found in modern fiction . But in his later novels Bro . Besant has trodden

new ground ; and there can be no doubt that tnough philanthropy has been the gainer for this new departure , his novels as works of art have distinctly suffered . The artist has for the time b-: ing become lost in the philanthropist , and though the author of " All Sorts and Conditions of Men " may point proudly to the People ' s Palace as a lasting monument to the novelist ' s power , yet we would

ask him now to forsake " philanthropic" novels and give us one of his old ones , which shall amuse and cheer and delight . One perfect little story Bro . Besant has given us in recent yearsthe one called "Julia , " which appeared in Maciiiillans , and tells of a girl who did bookbinding by day and ballet-dancing by night . A

more exquisitely true and touching little story has , perhaps , never been written in modern times , and shows that Bro . Besant is a master of the difficult art of short story-telling . But Bro . Besant is not only a writer of novels . There is hardly any human movement of any kind in which he is not interested ; and it is nothing

less than wonderful that a busy writer should find time and inclination for interests of so varied a kind . As a trustee of the People ' s Palace , he has taken an immense part in the organisation of the Library ; and in the first year of its existence he went down regularly once a week , often two , and even three times , if

necessary—no small effort when it is remembered that a railway journey to Mile-end involves the best part of an afternoon . The present writer saw in these days a good deal of him , and can testify that in the not too smooth path of a trustee Bro . Besant always exhibited a kindness , consideration , and geniality of temper which were gratefully recognised by all those who had to work there . It is only lately that Bro . Besant has resigned the

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