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  • March 31, 1848
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The Freemasons' Quarterly Review, March 31, 1848: Page 15

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    Article ON FREEMASONRY, ← Page 3 of 5 →
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On Freemasonry,

on this . The terms of such a league , with the sole end in view of embarrassing the charitable operations of Freemasonry , would be worth knowing , if they could be correctly ascertained . " " But they are too well guarded , " rejoined B ; " and I opine , that these bold contemners of your secret , will keep their own too closely to incur any danger of a discovery . " " It is alas , too true ; but I am still at a loss to know what there can be in Masonry to excite the ire of Protestant and Catholicand cause them to

, unite , like Herod and Pilate against Christ , to disturb the onward progress of an unassuming society , and to restrict its means of doing good . We may venture however to remind them of a few historical facts from which they may learn the insufficiency of persecution to crush an adversary . Did the ten primitive persecutions , from Nero to Diocletian , extirpate Christianity ? By no means ; for even Gibbon could say— ' these persecutions served only to revive the zeal and restore the discipline of the faithful . ' Did the massitci-e of St . Bartholomew extirpate the Huguenots ? Did the persecutions

under our own Mary , destroy the Protestant succession in England ? Did the Morgan persecution , although it was carried to such a length as to number two thirds of the population in the league against it , succeed in extirpating ( as it threatened ) every vestige of Masonry in the United States ? All these tremendous engines of oppression signally failed in their effect . And so will the present crusade against Freemasonry in England , although Catholic and Protestant may exert their utmost energies to inflict upon it some grievous injury . "

" There may be some truth in this , but it is to be hoped these worthies are not actuated by such vindictive feelings . " " My dear friend , we should be sorry to impute uncharitable motives to the contracting parties in this unholy alliance ; but we confess our

incapability of tracing it to a pure source . " [ We shall leave them therefore to their own reflections , which will not be very enviable when they discover , by perusing the following chapters , if they are candid enough to devote a few minutes to their consideration , how widely they have steered from the mark in accusing us of practices which have not virtue for their basis . ] " And supposing we are willing to admit the validity of this plea , what will you say to Mr . Soane ' s attack ? He has taken a different line of argument from the reviewers ; and , I think , has ably refuted your absurd pretensions to hi

a gh antiquity . " " Mr . Soane is a Bachelor of Arts , and ambitious of popularity . He has therefore offered himself as a candidate for the doubtful fame which attends an attempted exposure of the designs of Masonry . He has been imprudent enough to launch his javelin against the immortal Order . But , alas , the hand is feeble , and the dart recoils guiltless of blood . We hope no one will attempt to answer Mr . Soane . It will give him a consequence which he little merits . He has placed himself in precisely the situation which we wish him to

keep ; for he stands exposed to the ridicule of the whole fraternity , and we should be sorry to see his position disturbed . In the language of Cervantes , ' though injuries are apt to awaken choler in the humblest breasts , yet in ours this rule must admit of an exception . You would have me , perhaps , call him ass , madman , and coxcomb ; but I have no such design . Let his own sin be his punishment ; let him eat it with his food , and much good may it do him ! ' We are not sorry however to find that the doctor has iven him a touch—a sliht — waft with

g very gonea mere the feather of his quill pen—but sufficient to fetter him so tightly to his position , with a chain of dates , that his ineffectual attempts to extricate himself will make our joyous fraternity laugh all the louder . " * " What ! are ycu indifferent to Mr . Soane ' s assertion that Freemasonry is ' the fiction of a credulous age , and that , as the day of mysticism has gone

“The Freemasons' Quarterly Review: 1848-03-31, Page 15” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 25 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fqr/issues/fqr_31031848/page/15/.
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Title Category Page
QUARTERLY REVIEW, SBCOHD SERIES, Article 1
TO BROTHER JOHN BIGG, WHOSE PUBLIC AND P... Article 2
CONTENTS. Article 3
THE GRAND ORIENT AND THE PROVISIONAL GOVERNMENT OF FRANCE. Article 4
THE MASTERS', PAST MASTERS', AND WARDENS' CLUB. Article 4
THE FREEMASONS' QUARTERLY REVIEW. Article 5
ON FREEMASONRY, Article 13
CHAPTER I. Article 17
THE FREEMASONS' LEXICON. Article 22
THE GRAND LODGE OF ENGLAND, AND THE REPRESENTATIVE SYSTEM. Article 30
AN ACCOUNT OF THE VICISSITUDES OF THE NEAPOLITAN MASONRY; Article 32
TO THE PROVINCIAL MEMBERS OF GRAND LODGE. Article 40
MISSILES FROM THE MOON. Article 42
GREAT SOLAR SPOT. Article 43
TO THE EDITOR. Article 45
TO THE EDITOR. Article 45
TO THE EDITOR. Article 46
TO THE EDITOR. Article 46
TO THE EDITOR. Article 47
TO THE EDITOR. Article 47
TO THE EDITOR. Article 47
TO THE EDITOR. Article 47
TO THE EDITOR. Article 48
TO THE EDITOR. Article 49
POETRY. Article 49
A MASON'S WISH. Article 50
MASONIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 51
QUARTERLY COMMUNICATION. Article 52
GRAND CONCLAVE OF ENGLAND AND WALES. Article 64
SUPREME GRAND COUNCIL FOR ENGLAND AND WALES. Article 64
THE CHARITIES. Article 65
THE REPORTER. Article 66
CHIT CHAT. Article 72
Obituary. Article 75
PROVINCIAL. Article 80
SCOTLAND. Article 93
IRELAND. Article 95
FOREIGN. Article 99
AMERICA.—UNITED STATES. Article 106
INDIA. Article 107
LITERARY NOTICES. Article 113
POSTCRIPT. Article 118
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 119
CONTENTS. Article 121
THE GENERAL ASSURANCE ADVOCATE, AND FREEMASONS' QUARTERLY REVIEW. Article 122
INDEX. Article 123
THE FREEMASONS' QUARTERLY REVIEWS. SECOND SERIES. Article 125
SM^^S^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^mlSj|.%yflyS;f^ Sj4... Article 126
FREEMASONS' QUARTERLY ADVERTISER. SECOND... Article 127
FREEMASONS' HOTEL, GREAT QUEEN STREET, L... Article 128
FREEMASONRY. BROTHER J. CURTIS, PIER HOT... Article 128
FBEEMASONRY. X.IRTE ENGRAVING OF THE STA... Article 128
FilEG.MASONKY. BROTHE R J. P. ACKLA M, M... Article 129
BEHOYAIi !!! W. EVANS, MASONIC JEWELLER ... Article 129
FREEMASONRY. A. D. LOEWENSTARK, MANUFACT... Article 129
NOTICE. THE GOLDEN REMAINS OF THE EARLY ... Article 130
Just Published, Price Sd., SUBSTANCE of ... Article 130
CITY OF LONDON LIFE ASSURANCE SOCIETY, 2... Article 130
DISEASED AND ESALTHY LIVES ASSURED. B'lE... Article 130
REDUCED RATES FOR TERM POLICIES. CLERICA... Article 131
ENGINEERS', MASONIC, AND GENERAL MUTUAL ... Article 132
Engineers', Masonic , and General Mutual... Article 133
BENIOWSKl'S ARTIFICIAL MEMORY. Lectures ... Article 133
COMFORT F OR TEH B ER F HET , &c. HALL a... Article 133
THE LONDON GENERAL TAILORING ESTABLISHME... Article 134
LIMBIRD'S MAGHNUM BONUM STEEL PENS. AT 6... Article 134
BROTHER W. POVEY, MASONIC BOOKBINDER AND... Article 134
fi ALL'S ANTIBILIOUS PILLS.—The most use... Article 135
THE LATE BROTHER R. B. PEAKE. Article 136
GOVERNESSES BENEVOLENT INSTITUTION. Article 137
JUST PUBLISHED , Price 5s. Cloth , A MIR... Article 141
CONTENTS OE A MIRROR FOR THE JOHANNITE MASONS. Article 142
LIST OF DR. OLIVER'S WORKS ON FREEMASONRY, Article 143
GOLDEN REMAINS OF EARLY MASONIC WRITERS. Article 146
Patronized by the Most Worshipful the Gr... Article 147
Just Published, price 2s. in Roan Tuck C... Article 148
TO THE MASTERS OF LODGES. Article 149
- 1 FOUR-FIFTHS, ot EIGHTY PER CENT, of ... Article 150
^ ^ , , i^V* * "" <¦ -^ is ^ ^ t* ' j £-... Article 150
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

On Freemasonry,

on this . The terms of such a league , with the sole end in view of embarrassing the charitable operations of Freemasonry , would be worth knowing , if they could be correctly ascertained . " " But they are too well guarded , " rejoined B ; " and I opine , that these bold contemners of your secret , will keep their own too closely to incur any danger of a discovery . " " It is alas , too true ; but I am still at a loss to know what there can be in Masonry to excite the ire of Protestant and Catholicand cause them to

, unite , like Herod and Pilate against Christ , to disturb the onward progress of an unassuming society , and to restrict its means of doing good . We may venture however to remind them of a few historical facts from which they may learn the insufficiency of persecution to crush an adversary . Did the ten primitive persecutions , from Nero to Diocletian , extirpate Christianity ? By no means ; for even Gibbon could say— ' these persecutions served only to revive the zeal and restore the discipline of the faithful . ' Did the massitci-e of St . Bartholomew extirpate the Huguenots ? Did the persecutions

under our own Mary , destroy the Protestant succession in England ? Did the Morgan persecution , although it was carried to such a length as to number two thirds of the population in the league against it , succeed in extirpating ( as it threatened ) every vestige of Masonry in the United States ? All these tremendous engines of oppression signally failed in their effect . And so will the present crusade against Freemasonry in England , although Catholic and Protestant may exert their utmost energies to inflict upon it some grievous injury . "

" There may be some truth in this , but it is to be hoped these worthies are not actuated by such vindictive feelings . " " My dear friend , we should be sorry to impute uncharitable motives to the contracting parties in this unholy alliance ; but we confess our

incapability of tracing it to a pure source . " [ We shall leave them therefore to their own reflections , which will not be very enviable when they discover , by perusing the following chapters , if they are candid enough to devote a few minutes to their consideration , how widely they have steered from the mark in accusing us of practices which have not virtue for their basis . ] " And supposing we are willing to admit the validity of this plea , what will you say to Mr . Soane ' s attack ? He has taken a different line of argument from the reviewers ; and , I think , has ably refuted your absurd pretensions to hi

a gh antiquity . " " Mr . Soane is a Bachelor of Arts , and ambitious of popularity . He has therefore offered himself as a candidate for the doubtful fame which attends an attempted exposure of the designs of Masonry . He has been imprudent enough to launch his javelin against the immortal Order . But , alas , the hand is feeble , and the dart recoils guiltless of blood . We hope no one will attempt to answer Mr . Soane . It will give him a consequence which he little merits . He has placed himself in precisely the situation which we wish him to

keep ; for he stands exposed to the ridicule of the whole fraternity , and we should be sorry to see his position disturbed . In the language of Cervantes , ' though injuries are apt to awaken choler in the humblest breasts , yet in ours this rule must admit of an exception . You would have me , perhaps , call him ass , madman , and coxcomb ; but I have no such design . Let his own sin be his punishment ; let him eat it with his food , and much good may it do him ! ' We are not sorry however to find that the doctor has iven him a touch—a sliht — waft with

g very gonea mere the feather of his quill pen—but sufficient to fetter him so tightly to his position , with a chain of dates , that his ineffectual attempts to extricate himself will make our joyous fraternity laugh all the louder . " * " What ! are ycu indifferent to Mr . Soane ' s assertion that Freemasonry is ' the fiction of a credulous age , and that , as the day of mysticism has gone

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