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  • March 31, 1837
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    Article THE PRACTICAL BENEVOLENCE OF FREEMASONRY. ← Page 2 of 4 →
Page 24

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

The Practical Benevolence Of Freemasonry.

and beneficial tendency of the rites and ceremonies , morals and science which are practised and enforced in the tyled recesses of the Lodge . The widow's tear—the orphan ' s cry-All wants—our ready hands supply , As far as power is given . The naked clothe—the prisoner free—These are thy works sweet Charity , Revealed tous from Heaven .

It was requisite that Freemasonry should assume a high position amongst the institutions of the country , at a time when , by the reestablishment of its Grand Lodge on a firm basis , public attention was called to the Order , and its general utility excited discussion amongst scientific and thinking men . Ashmole and Locke scrutinized our pretensions with severity , and were convinced . The triumph of our scientific claims was consummated by their initiation . The public

avowal of their sentiments was placed on permanent record , and they continued to attend the Lodges , and to advocate the principles of Freemasonry to the end of their lives . Locke took upon himself the trouble to examine and exemplify a manuscript in the Bodleian , for the information of Lady Masham ; who , he says , was " become so fond of Masonry , as to say , that she now , more than ever , wishes herself a man , that she might be capable of admission into the fraternity . " In thc

course of a most interesting investigation of this manuscript , he informs her Ladyship , that " it was his wish , the secrets of Masonry were communicated to all mankind ; since there is nothing more true than what the Masons teach , that the better men are , the more they love one another ; virtue having in itself something so amiable as to charm the hearts of all who behold it . " Subsequently , this eminent philosopher and Mason acknowledged to Lord Pembroke , that it was this very enquiry ivhich induced him to be initiated . " " It has so much raised my curiosity , " these are his words , " as to induce me to enter myself into

the fraternity ; which I am determined to do ( if I maybe admitted ) the next time I go to London , and that will he shortly . ' ' And Ashmole says of himself , in his diary , " on March the 10 th , 1682 , about 5 hor . p . m . I received a summons to appear at a Lodge , to be held the next day at Mason ' s Hall , in London . Accordingly , I went , and about noon was admitted into the Fellowship of Freemasons ; Sir William AVilson , Knt .: Captain R . Borthwick , and several others . I was the senior

Fellow among them , it being 35 years since I was admitted . " Shortly liter this period the Duke of Buccleugh proposed the establishment of a general fund of Benevolence , for the relief of distressed Masons . Local funds of the same description had been long before in active operation amongst the private Lodges ; for the writer of Ashmole ' s life says , that in his time " they had Lodges in different countries for the reception of strange Brethren ; and when any of them fall into

decay , the Brotherhood is to relieve them . " A general fund , however , appeared to promise a more extended usefulness ; and its formation placed Freemasonry before the public eye in a new and amiable form . It was soon followed by the establishment of those noble Foundations for the female children of indigent Brethren , or orphans ; one of which emanated from the piactical benevolence of thc Chevalier Ruspini , and was brought to perfection under the patronage of the Duchess of Cumberland ; and the other was subsequently formed under the name of the Royal Masonic Institution , for Clothing , Educating , and Apprenticing

“The Freemasons' Quarterly Review: 1837-03-31, Page 24” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 24 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fqr/issues/fqr_31031837/page/24/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
THE FREEMASONS' QUARTERLY REVIEW. Article 1
ON FREEMASONRY. Article 9
CABALISTIC OBSERVATIONS ON FREEMASONRY. Article 19
MASONIC DIDACTICS; OR, SHORT MORAL ESSAYS OF UNIVERSAL ADAPTATON. Article 21
THE PRACTICAL BENEVOLENCE OF FREEMASONRY. Article 23
THE CONVERT. Article 27
FEMALE PREJUDICES AND ANTIPATHIES. Article 33
FREEMASONRY ON BOARD AN INDIAMAN IN 1836. Article 36
FREEMASONRY. Article 37
MASONIC ANECDOTE. Article 37
LINES Article 38
GENIUS OF FREEMASONRY. Article 39
TO EVADNE. Article 40
ODE Article 40
MASTER MASON'S SONG. Article 41
THE FREEMASONS' CALENDAR, 1775. Article 41
THE VARIOUS MASONIC CHARITIES Article 45
ROYAL FREEMASON'S CHARITY FOR FEMALE CHILDREN , Article 46
ELEVATION. Article 47
DE RE NON-MASONICA.* Article 58
ON THE PRESENT STATE OF ROYAL ARCH MASONRY. Article 60
TO THE EDITOR. Article 62
TO THE EDITOR. Article 63
TO THE EDITOR. Article 64
TO THE EDITOR. Article 64
MASONIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 65
FREEMASON'S HALL. BIRTH DAY OF H.R.H. THE DUKE OF SUSSEX, M.W.G.M. Article 66
ASYLUM FOR AGED AND DECAYED FREEMASONS. Article 72
SUPREME GRAND CHAPTER. Article 79
QUARTERLY COMMUNICATION. Article 80
AUDIT OF THE GRAND LODGE. Article 81
MASONIC KNIGHTS' TEMPLARS. Article 85
MASONIC CHIT CHAT. Article 86
Obituary. Article 90
TO THE EDITOR. Article 94
TO THE EDITOR. Article 94
PROVINCIAL. Article 95
SCOTLAND. Article 113
IRELAND. Article 124
MASONIC GOD SAVE THE KING. Article 132
FOREIGN. Article 134
INDIA. Article 135
UNITED STATES. Article 135
REVIEW OF LITERATURE. Article 136
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 140
INDEX. Article 144
- y^ yy^yy- y^ yy. ;: AA . - .v'i ., - -... Article 146
' I f . JUST PUBLISHED, BY SHERWOOD, GIL... Article 147
FREEMASONS' QUARTERLY ADVERTISER. Article 148
FREEMASONRY. ' ROYAL FREEMASONS' SCHOOL ... Article 149
FREEMASONRY. ASYLUM FOR AGED AND DECAYED... Article 149
PREEMASONRY. ROYAL MASONIC INSTITUTION E... Article 149
FREEMASONRY. KNIGHTS TEMPLAR OF SCOTLAND... Article 150
PREEMASONRY. A LADY, the WIDOW of a FREE... Article 150
FREEMASONRY. BROTHER W. POVEY, BOOKBINDE... Article 150
FREEMASONRY. BROTHER JOHN CANHAM, DECEAS... Article 150
ROYAL ARCH MASONRY. COMPANION J. HARRIS ... Article 150
FREEMASONRY. J. P. ACKLAM, MASONIC JEWEL... Article 151
FREEMASONRY. DR. OLIVER'S LECTURES. Now ... Article 151
FREEMASONRY. MASONIC SONG. THE GREY HEAD... Article 151
IN THE PRESS, UNDER THE PATRONAGE Op HER... Article 151
Just published, to be had at Duncombe's,... Article 151
Just published, in 4to. price 10s. 6d. w... Article 151
PREPARING FOR PUBLICATION. HISTORY OF EU... Article 152
WORKS PUBLISHED BY JOHN LIMBIRD, Article 153
LIMEIRD S WORKS CONTINUED. VIII. Price 2... Article 154
NEW SPRING ANNUAL, Lately published. Pri... Article 155
TAUNTON ALE BREWERY. BROTHER EALES WHITE... Article 155
SIGHT RESTORED, Nervous Head-Ache Cured,... Article 155
CHANTER'S PATENT AUXILIARY BOILER AND FU... Article 155
PATENT LEVER WATCHES, with silver double... Article 155
10 THE NOBILITY, GENTRY, AND FAMILIES FU... Article 156
PLATE GLASS. |^ARVING and GILDING, CHAIR... Article 156
WINTER'S PATENT, SELF-ACTING , RECLINING... Article 156
TC rS A Y CLOCKS,—to strike the hours an... Article 156
TO PREVENT FRAUD. THORN'S POTTED YARMOUT... Article 156
PROTECTED BY FIVE PATENTS. PERRYIAN PENS... Article 157
Magna et Veritas et preBvalebit. GALL'S ... Article 157
UNDER THE ESPECIAL PATRONAGE OP HIS MOST... Article 158
SARSAPARILLA. "j\/g R. WRAY, of Holborn ... Article 158
SOFT AND WHITE HANDS. BENTLEY'S EMOLLIEN... Article 158
BALSAM OF SPERMACETI. A STHMA, Shortness... Article 159
A T a time when doubts justly arise resp... Article 159
FREEMASON'S SAUCE. WILLIAM BACHHOFFNER, ... Article 159
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

The Practical Benevolence Of Freemasonry.

and beneficial tendency of the rites and ceremonies , morals and science which are practised and enforced in the tyled recesses of the Lodge . The widow's tear—the orphan ' s cry-All wants—our ready hands supply , As far as power is given . The naked clothe—the prisoner free—These are thy works sweet Charity , Revealed tous from Heaven .

It was requisite that Freemasonry should assume a high position amongst the institutions of the country , at a time when , by the reestablishment of its Grand Lodge on a firm basis , public attention was called to the Order , and its general utility excited discussion amongst scientific and thinking men . Ashmole and Locke scrutinized our pretensions with severity , and were convinced . The triumph of our scientific claims was consummated by their initiation . The public

avowal of their sentiments was placed on permanent record , and they continued to attend the Lodges , and to advocate the principles of Freemasonry to the end of their lives . Locke took upon himself the trouble to examine and exemplify a manuscript in the Bodleian , for the information of Lady Masham ; who , he says , was " become so fond of Masonry , as to say , that she now , more than ever , wishes herself a man , that she might be capable of admission into the fraternity . " In thc

course of a most interesting investigation of this manuscript , he informs her Ladyship , that " it was his wish , the secrets of Masonry were communicated to all mankind ; since there is nothing more true than what the Masons teach , that the better men are , the more they love one another ; virtue having in itself something so amiable as to charm the hearts of all who behold it . " Subsequently , this eminent philosopher and Mason acknowledged to Lord Pembroke , that it was this very enquiry ivhich induced him to be initiated . " " It has so much raised my curiosity , " these are his words , " as to induce me to enter myself into

the fraternity ; which I am determined to do ( if I maybe admitted ) the next time I go to London , and that will he shortly . ' ' And Ashmole says of himself , in his diary , " on March the 10 th , 1682 , about 5 hor . p . m . I received a summons to appear at a Lodge , to be held the next day at Mason ' s Hall , in London . Accordingly , I went , and about noon was admitted into the Fellowship of Freemasons ; Sir William AVilson , Knt .: Captain R . Borthwick , and several others . I was the senior

Fellow among them , it being 35 years since I was admitted . " Shortly liter this period the Duke of Buccleugh proposed the establishment of a general fund of Benevolence , for the relief of distressed Masons . Local funds of the same description had been long before in active operation amongst the private Lodges ; for the writer of Ashmole ' s life says , that in his time " they had Lodges in different countries for the reception of strange Brethren ; and when any of them fall into

decay , the Brotherhood is to relieve them . " A general fund , however , appeared to promise a more extended usefulness ; and its formation placed Freemasonry before the public eye in a new and amiable form . It was soon followed by the establishment of those noble Foundations for the female children of indigent Brethren , or orphans ; one of which emanated from the piactical benevolence of thc Chevalier Ruspini , and was brought to perfection under the patronage of the Duchess of Cumberland ; and the other was subsequently formed under the name of the Royal Masonic Institution , for Clothing , Educating , and Apprenticing

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