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  • March 31, 1841
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The Freemasons' Quarterly Review, March 31, 1841: Page 89

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    Article PROVINCIAL. ← Page 16 of 24 →
Page 89

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Provincial.

approbation and fraternal regard , my Brethren , with higher feelings than those of ordinary self-gratification , because I consider the testimonial as emanating from a lively recollection on your parts , of those important public ceremonies wliich have accompanied our provincial labours , and which , as marked eras of the moral influence of Freemasonry over society at large , have given an elevation of character to our Order in Cornwallwhichthough slumbering at present from natural and

unavoid-, , able changes , will nevertheless rise again and flourish with new incident , passing on unimpaired to future generations . The first public ceremony , my Brethren , at which I had the honour to preside with you as a Masonic body was , I believe , our dedication to the Almighty Architect of the Universe , of the present light house at the mouth of the Falmouth harbour , as an object of the highest importance to the maritime community at large , but more particularly interesting to the families and friends

of those hardy and enterprising mariners , whose undaunted race for upwards of a century past had nobly " braved the battle and the breeze . " Our next provincial labours were devoted to the ceremony of laying the foundation stone of a monumental tribute of sorrowing relatives , admiring friends , and a liberal ancl discriminating public , to the heroic African travellers—the Landers —( loud cheers)—who nobly devoted the bloom of their manhood in that baneful landwhich led alike to the goal of their

, mutual ambition , and the consequent aggrandisement of their country ' s glory ; and ivhere , with a determination of purpose , unexampled in the annals of history , and at the sacrifice of life from savage assassination of the one , and the subsequent premature dissolution , from the fatal effects of climate , of the other , these dauntless ancl elevated young men

triumphantly succeeded in the accomplishment of a national enterprise which had baffled the labours , skill , and fatal perseverance of a succession of victims in the same perilous pursuit , from Ledyard ancl Park to Laing and Clapperton —( loucl cheering ) . The impressions of this imposing , ceremony was scarcely dormant , when we were again called upon to assist , as a Masonic body , in doing public honour to the memory of a deceased nobleman in the county , whom it had been our pride and boast to hail as a Brothera patronand a friend ! Need I here utter the

, , venerated name of De Dunstanville , my Brethren , to bring to your recollections our solemn ceremonies at Cam Brea ?—( hear , hear)—where thousands—I may add tens of thousands of our countrymen , were assembled to proclaim , in loud and grateful acclamations , the concentric virtues of hereditary rank and worth without pride—solid understanding and talent devoid of pedantry or ostentation—unbounded charity blended with Christian humility—patriotism unsullied by party spirit or

solitary selfish interest—great moral courage and domestic amiability , combined with refined private friendship , and based on the generous affections of the purest principles of benevolence —( cheers ) . These , my Brethren , and every other cardinal virtue which can elevate man in the scale of society here below , and ensure his eternal welfare hereafter , were the inherent offsprings of the heart , and the unvarying characteristics of the actions of Tehidy ' s last noble representative—the exaltedbeloved

, , and universally lamented Francis Lord De Dunstanville and Basset ! I must here , my esteemed Brethren , entreat you to pardon my indulging thus long in cherished retrospection of past associations , which I am confident are as indelibly engraven on all your hearts as on mine . But I cannot refrain from availing myself of the present , and , perhaps , the last opportunity I may have of proclaiming to so distinguished au assem-

“The Freemasons' Quarterly Review: 1841-03-31, Page 89” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 24 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fqr/issues/fqr_31031841/page/89/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
THE FREEMASONS' QUARTERLY REVIEW. Article 1
TO A FREEMASON,.N THE TRUE SENSE AND MEA... Article 2
CON T E N T S. Article 3
LATE EDITORIAL ANNOUNCEMENT. Article 5
TO OUR READERS. Article 5
THE FREEMASONS' QUARTERLY REVIEW. Article 6
THE CRUCEFIX TESTIMONIAL. Article 15
THE BOYS' SCHOOL. Article 17
ON FREEMASONRY. EVIDENCES, DOCTRINES, AND TRADITIONS. Article 18
ON THE HISTORY OF INITIATION. Article 28
NOTITIAE TEMPLARIAE. Article 32
THE TEMPLE CHURCH. Article 35
THE LIBRARY AND MUSEUM. Article 36
A MASON'S ADVENTURE; Article 38
/T HE sensitive mind discovers poetry ev... Article 41
THE KEY STONE. Article 42
MASONIC ANECDOTES. Article 44
THE PRODIGAL'S BRIDE. Article 46
TO THE EDITOR. Article 49
POETRY. Article 53
SONNET. Article 54
RESIGNATION. Article 54
TO LIZZIE. Article 54
MASONIC SONG. Article 55
THE VOICE OF LOVE. Article 56
PETRARCH'S SONNET, No. 48. Article 56
MASONIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 57
QUARTERLY COMMUNICATION— MARCH 3. Article 59
SUPREME ROYAL ARCH CHAPTER. Article 60
QUARTERLY CONVOCATION.—FEB. 3. Article 60
THE CHARITIES. Article 60
THE REPORTER. Article 69
MASONIC CHIT CHAT. Article 72
Obituary. Article 73
PROVINCIAL. Article 74
SCOTLAND. Article 98
IRELAND. Article 103
FOREIGN. Article 108
INDIA. Article 116
POSTSCRIPT. Article 127
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 131
INDEX. Article 134
THE FREEMASONS' QUARTERLY REVIEW. Article 136
TIIE FREEMASONS' Article 137
!'.:--: .'--—.——r^-» —- ¦— - -^v— —.—^iE... Article 138
Untitled Ad 139
FREEMASONS' QUARTERLY ADVERTISER. No. XX... Article 140
ASYLUM FOR WORTHY AGED AND DECAYED FREEM... Article 140
FREEMASONRY. ROYAL FREEMASONS' CHARITY F... Article 140
FREEMASONRY. THE ROYAL MASONIC INSTITUTI... Article 141
FREEMASONRY. BROTHER W. POVEY, MASONIC B... Article 141
FREEMASONRY. BROTHER J. P. ACKLAM, MASON... Article 141
FREEMASONRY. DROTHERS BROADHURST and Co.... Article 141
FREEMASON RY. TMTASONIC CLOTHING, FURNIT... Article 141
MASONIC LIBRA KY, 314, HIGH HOLBORN. BRO... Article 142
FREE MASONRY. 28, New Street, Covent Gar... Article 142
TO PARENTS, &c. A MARRIED CLERGYMAN, res... Article 142
FREEMASONRY. 1 THE HISTORY OF INITIATION... Article 143
In One Volume , Svo. Price 12s., cloth l... Article 143
New Edition, 6 vols, small Svo. 5s. each... Article 144
Now publishing in Monthly Parts, price T... Article 144
MASONRY IS CHARITY AND GOOD-WILL TO ALL ... Article 144
WATCHES, PLATE, AND JEWELLERY. T P. ACKL... Article 144
BRITANNIA LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY, Article 145
TO PREVENT FRAUD. THORNE'S POTTED YARMOU... Article 146
Magna est Veritas et prcevalebit. GALL'S... Article 146
MECHI'S ADDRESS TO HIS CUSTOMERS AND THE PUBLIC. Article 147
LIST OF ARTICLES. Article 148
CHARLOTTE'S TAVERN, v ENTRANCE 32, BUCKL... Article 148
THE CRUCEFIX TESTIMONIAL. A GENERAL MEET... Article 149
GLOBE INSURANCE. PALL-MALL; AND CORNHILL... Article 149
CAPITAL, ONE MILLION STERLING. The whole... Article 149
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Page 89

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

Provincial.

approbation and fraternal regard , my Brethren , with higher feelings than those of ordinary self-gratification , because I consider the testimonial as emanating from a lively recollection on your parts , of those important public ceremonies wliich have accompanied our provincial labours , and which , as marked eras of the moral influence of Freemasonry over society at large , have given an elevation of character to our Order in Cornwallwhichthough slumbering at present from natural and

unavoid-, , able changes , will nevertheless rise again and flourish with new incident , passing on unimpaired to future generations . The first public ceremony , my Brethren , at which I had the honour to preside with you as a Masonic body was , I believe , our dedication to the Almighty Architect of the Universe , of the present light house at the mouth of the Falmouth harbour , as an object of the highest importance to the maritime community at large , but more particularly interesting to the families and friends

of those hardy and enterprising mariners , whose undaunted race for upwards of a century past had nobly " braved the battle and the breeze . " Our next provincial labours were devoted to the ceremony of laying the foundation stone of a monumental tribute of sorrowing relatives , admiring friends , and a liberal ancl discriminating public , to the heroic African travellers—the Landers —( loud cheers)—who nobly devoted the bloom of their manhood in that baneful landwhich led alike to the goal of their

, mutual ambition , and the consequent aggrandisement of their country ' s glory ; and ivhere , with a determination of purpose , unexampled in the annals of history , and at the sacrifice of life from savage assassination of the one , and the subsequent premature dissolution , from the fatal effects of climate , of the other , these dauntless ancl elevated young men

triumphantly succeeded in the accomplishment of a national enterprise which had baffled the labours , skill , and fatal perseverance of a succession of victims in the same perilous pursuit , from Ledyard ancl Park to Laing and Clapperton —( loucl cheering ) . The impressions of this imposing , ceremony was scarcely dormant , when we were again called upon to assist , as a Masonic body , in doing public honour to the memory of a deceased nobleman in the county , whom it had been our pride and boast to hail as a Brothera patronand a friend ! Need I here utter the

, , venerated name of De Dunstanville , my Brethren , to bring to your recollections our solemn ceremonies at Cam Brea ?—( hear , hear)—where thousands—I may add tens of thousands of our countrymen , were assembled to proclaim , in loud and grateful acclamations , the concentric virtues of hereditary rank and worth without pride—solid understanding and talent devoid of pedantry or ostentation—unbounded charity blended with Christian humility—patriotism unsullied by party spirit or

solitary selfish interest—great moral courage and domestic amiability , combined with refined private friendship , and based on the generous affections of the purest principles of benevolence —( cheers ) . These , my Brethren , and every other cardinal virtue which can elevate man in the scale of society here below , and ensure his eternal welfare hereafter , were the inherent offsprings of the heart , and the unvarying characteristics of the actions of Tehidy ' s last noble representative—the exaltedbeloved

, , and universally lamented Francis Lord De Dunstanville and Basset ! I must here , my esteemed Brethren , entreat you to pardon my indulging thus long in cherished retrospection of past associations , which I am confident are as indelibly engraven on all your hearts as on mine . But I cannot refrain from availing myself of the present , and , perhaps , the last opportunity I may have of proclaiming to so distinguished au assem-

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