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  • Sept. 1, 1890
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The Masonic Review, Sept. 1, 1890: Page 2

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    Article Round and About. ← Page 2 of 11 →
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Round And About.

In the Art School of Bedford Park a little coterie of Bohemians , whose dramatic and literary duties allow of no other opportunity , gather together on Sunday mornings at the hour of eleven for a very worthy purpose . They are all members of the Craft , and turn up in their smoking hats

and lounge coats just to show their sincerity in their work . What think you , ye railers at the " actor chaps , " come these men o' Sunday morn to do ? You cannot say perhaps ? Then let me tell you .

Norman Shaw and Maurice Adams ' s Queen Anne Church looks pretty in the sunshine of a summer morning , and the bells are calling the worshippers of Bedford Park out of their cosy little red-brick huts and bungalows as a few men stand on the steps of the handsome Art Club in Bath-road , waiting

for another , who comes briskly along between the plane-trees . Mutual morning greetings take place , and presently a start is made for the Nude Room on the second floor . The staircase is lined with the clever work of the Art School students . Studies in chalk from the life , in colour from the model , in pencil from the cast , and then there are many creditable designs for textile fabrics , or sketches in black-and-white

for Egyptian embroidery . In the Nude Room on the walls are more sketches and casts , and on the wooden floor a dozen chairs , a few modelling boxes , which make excellent platforms , four curious looking pedestals , and a few more extraordinary things known in Masonic circles as furniture .

When all have entered , the door is safely locked , and all present busy themselves with the preparation of a Lodge of Instruction . Think of it , you scoffers at the manliness and sincerity of the actor and the journalist . Here are men who devote the one day in the week they have for rest and quietude to intellectual improvement in the holy science of our Craft .

* -. 1 -t The chair is taken by a certain Bro . W . Lestocq , whose charming rendering of the Butler , in " New Lamps for Old , " was such a brilliant piece of acting . The Senior Warden's chair is filled by Bro . Miller , the duties of Junior Warden are

very imperfectly undertaken by a man who is not altogether unknown as "The Druid . " The Deacon and Inner Guard are represented by Howard Reynolds , the Secretary is Bro . Holloway , for five-and-twenty years a leading actor across the herring-pond , and the Initiate is Harry Nicholls .

With care and impressiveness the working of the Third Degree is completed , and I am complimented by being elected a member of the Genesius Club . The whole thing impressed me as being novel and sincere , and I am very happy indeed in being connected , if only as a passive

member , with a club of Worthy Masons who delight to devote the early hours of the Sabbath to a study of the ritual of Freemasonry . # * *

Bedford Park has much improved since I knew it well some seven years ago . Since then the place has been drained , better houses have been built , and the defects of the old ones remedied . The commons have been pathed and laid out with shrubs . The roads have been made , and

the picturesque redness of the village toned down with the ivy and trees which have since matured . There is a club house and tennis courts , a real " stores " where provisions of all kinds may be purchased at unheard of prices , a post and telegraph office , a church , and an hotel , and a railway

station in communication with all the centres of London . But , perhaps , its greatest virtue is its freedom from that terrible craze " ajstheticism , " which once nearly ruined Bedford Park . Servant girls no longer roam the streets decked in puff bonnets and gowned in Kate Greenaway costumes in sickly green .

My contemporary of Queen-street sketched the Mark Benevolent Fund Festival at Freemasons' Tavern from the shop-girl ' s point of view , and told its readers all the fun , in one of those silly letters from Gertie to Grade , which forms a strong feature in such monstrosities as the Shop Girts '

Gazette . A good idea of what the letter is worth may be had from the postscript , which reads thus : "P . S . —I forgot to say I have that black silk I had made in Baker-street . You know what I mean . "

Here , however , is a delicious bit from the body of the epistle , which more than ever stamps the opinion of my said contemporary for what Masonry was really instituted . I have generally understood that the Craft is constituted by a body of men who find enough good in life

and human nature to bind them a little closer together than the ordinary ties of social intercourse accomplish ; by ceremonious measures of a serious and elevating kind . But my understanding is at fault , evidently . Says Gertie to Gracie : — " All the men seem dressed up

to the eyes in gold chains , gold embroideries and glittering jewels . Too bad , I thought it , and so I told Fred ; but he only laughed at me . However , one day I shall get hold of his collar and apron and pick them to pieces to trim a frock for the next fancy dress ball . He

will be so wild ! " It is ' just this pot-house , bantering manner in which Masonic jewellers and candle manufacturers speak of a noble institution which causes the condemnation with which the general public look upon us .

* * * There is a great deal of humbug knocking about the Institutions for which , perhaps , nobody in particular is to blame ; and a very good instance of it was shown by the Hon . Sec . of the " Old Masonians" some time

ago now , when he gave a very depressing account of the manner in which the Lodges look down upon this association of worthy " old boys" of the Boys' Institution . But what concerns everybody at the moment is the discourtesy shown to the Association by a certain

seventy-five gentlemen out of a certain eighty . It appears that the Secretary , desirous , as he must have been , to make the annual dinner as successful as possible , invited

eighty " members of the Masonic Craft , " by circular , to countenance the Association either by attending the dinner , or otherwise , and only five out of that eighty—Messrs . George Lambert , F . J . Terry , Augustus Harris , A . F . Godson , M . P ., and W . W . Morgan—took the trouble to

reply . There comes another startling disclosure , however , which . shows what kind of soil beneath the little soft well raked mould which covers the ground , to all appearances deeply , Masonry really thrives on . It is this . " Last winter , " said the Secretary , " we held a dramatic

entertainment in St . James ' s Hall , when I sent out a circular to every Lodge in the kingdom . In reply I received but one solitary answer , which came from the Anchor Lodge

“The Masonic Review: 1890-09-01, Page 2” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 24 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/msr/issues/msr_01091890/page/2/.
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Round and About. Article 1
Untitled Article 10
Untitled Article 12
Eminent Masons at Home. Article 12
Untitled Article 13
THE SESSION. Article 15
THE HISTORY OF FREEMASONRY. Article 16
Gathered Chips. Article 17
Sawdust. Article 18
ANSWERS TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 22
Untitled Ad 22
Untitled Ad 23
Untitled Ad 23
Untitled Ad 23
Untitled Ad 23
Untitled Ad 23
Untitled Ad 23
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Round And About.

In the Art School of Bedford Park a little coterie of Bohemians , whose dramatic and literary duties allow of no other opportunity , gather together on Sunday mornings at the hour of eleven for a very worthy purpose . They are all members of the Craft , and turn up in their smoking hats

and lounge coats just to show their sincerity in their work . What think you , ye railers at the " actor chaps , " come these men o' Sunday morn to do ? You cannot say perhaps ? Then let me tell you .

Norman Shaw and Maurice Adams ' s Queen Anne Church looks pretty in the sunshine of a summer morning , and the bells are calling the worshippers of Bedford Park out of their cosy little red-brick huts and bungalows as a few men stand on the steps of the handsome Art Club in Bath-road , waiting

for another , who comes briskly along between the plane-trees . Mutual morning greetings take place , and presently a start is made for the Nude Room on the second floor . The staircase is lined with the clever work of the Art School students . Studies in chalk from the life , in colour from the model , in pencil from the cast , and then there are many creditable designs for textile fabrics , or sketches in black-and-white

for Egyptian embroidery . In the Nude Room on the walls are more sketches and casts , and on the wooden floor a dozen chairs , a few modelling boxes , which make excellent platforms , four curious looking pedestals , and a few more extraordinary things known in Masonic circles as furniture .

When all have entered , the door is safely locked , and all present busy themselves with the preparation of a Lodge of Instruction . Think of it , you scoffers at the manliness and sincerity of the actor and the journalist . Here are men who devote the one day in the week they have for rest and quietude to intellectual improvement in the holy science of our Craft .

* -. 1 -t The chair is taken by a certain Bro . W . Lestocq , whose charming rendering of the Butler , in " New Lamps for Old , " was such a brilliant piece of acting . The Senior Warden's chair is filled by Bro . Miller , the duties of Junior Warden are

very imperfectly undertaken by a man who is not altogether unknown as "The Druid . " The Deacon and Inner Guard are represented by Howard Reynolds , the Secretary is Bro . Holloway , for five-and-twenty years a leading actor across the herring-pond , and the Initiate is Harry Nicholls .

With care and impressiveness the working of the Third Degree is completed , and I am complimented by being elected a member of the Genesius Club . The whole thing impressed me as being novel and sincere , and I am very happy indeed in being connected , if only as a passive

member , with a club of Worthy Masons who delight to devote the early hours of the Sabbath to a study of the ritual of Freemasonry . # * *

Bedford Park has much improved since I knew it well some seven years ago . Since then the place has been drained , better houses have been built , and the defects of the old ones remedied . The commons have been pathed and laid out with shrubs . The roads have been made , and

the picturesque redness of the village toned down with the ivy and trees which have since matured . There is a club house and tennis courts , a real " stores " where provisions of all kinds may be purchased at unheard of prices , a post and telegraph office , a church , and an hotel , and a railway

station in communication with all the centres of London . But , perhaps , its greatest virtue is its freedom from that terrible craze " ajstheticism , " which once nearly ruined Bedford Park . Servant girls no longer roam the streets decked in puff bonnets and gowned in Kate Greenaway costumes in sickly green .

My contemporary of Queen-street sketched the Mark Benevolent Fund Festival at Freemasons' Tavern from the shop-girl ' s point of view , and told its readers all the fun , in one of those silly letters from Gertie to Grade , which forms a strong feature in such monstrosities as the Shop Girts '

Gazette . A good idea of what the letter is worth may be had from the postscript , which reads thus : "P . S . —I forgot to say I have that black silk I had made in Baker-street . You know what I mean . "

Here , however , is a delicious bit from the body of the epistle , which more than ever stamps the opinion of my said contemporary for what Masonry was really instituted . I have generally understood that the Craft is constituted by a body of men who find enough good in life

and human nature to bind them a little closer together than the ordinary ties of social intercourse accomplish ; by ceremonious measures of a serious and elevating kind . But my understanding is at fault , evidently . Says Gertie to Gracie : — " All the men seem dressed up

to the eyes in gold chains , gold embroideries and glittering jewels . Too bad , I thought it , and so I told Fred ; but he only laughed at me . However , one day I shall get hold of his collar and apron and pick them to pieces to trim a frock for the next fancy dress ball . He

will be so wild ! " It is ' just this pot-house , bantering manner in which Masonic jewellers and candle manufacturers speak of a noble institution which causes the condemnation with which the general public look upon us .

* * * There is a great deal of humbug knocking about the Institutions for which , perhaps , nobody in particular is to blame ; and a very good instance of it was shown by the Hon . Sec . of the " Old Masonians" some time

ago now , when he gave a very depressing account of the manner in which the Lodges look down upon this association of worthy " old boys" of the Boys' Institution . But what concerns everybody at the moment is the discourtesy shown to the Association by a certain

seventy-five gentlemen out of a certain eighty . It appears that the Secretary , desirous , as he must have been , to make the annual dinner as successful as possible , invited

eighty " members of the Masonic Craft , " by circular , to countenance the Association either by attending the dinner , or otherwise , and only five out of that eighty—Messrs . George Lambert , F . J . Terry , Augustus Harris , A . F . Godson , M . P ., and W . W . Morgan—took the trouble to

reply . There comes another startling disclosure , however , which . shows what kind of soil beneath the little soft well raked mould which covers the ground , to all appearances deeply , Masonry really thrives on . It is this . " Last winter , " said the Secretary , " we held a dramatic

entertainment in St . James ' s Hall , when I sent out a circular to every Lodge in the kingdom . In reply I received but one solitary answer , which came from the Anchor Lodge

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