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  • The Masonic Illustrated
  • Dec. 1, 1904
  • Page 19
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The Masonic Illustrated, Dec. 1, 1904: Page 19

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At The Sign Of The Perfect Ashlar.

There can be little doubt that almost every vestige of pure and ancient Masonry has disappeared from the ceremony and ritual , as well as the practice of what still retains the name of Freemasonry in France , and that control of the organisation has been gradually acquired and used by agitators , both political and anti clerical , to carry out , not always too scrupulously , their own particular views .

© <& <& The Standard of November 18 th has the following remarks on the subject : — " Freemasons who are unacquainted with the position of the Craft in France may be surprised and bewildered by the charges made against it lately . That the War Office should consult Provincial Grand Lodges

upon the character and qualifications of officers in the Army , or , indeed , on any other subject , seems grotesque . But there is no doubt of it . General Andre has admitted that he took advice from those bodies and acted on it . The truth is that Freemasonry in France and England are quite different institutions . They were identical at the beginning ; in fact ,

this was one of the many fashions borrowed from us by the French in the 18 th century . Lord Derwentwater is said to have founded the first lodge in Paris , and the Duke of Richmond the second . Lord Stratbmore , Grand Master of England , authorised both of them in 1733 . But the ' Spirit of the Revolution ' soon established itself in the French lodges , as is

not surprising , perhaps , and so transformed them in principles and practice that the Grand Lodge of England formally severed connection carlv in the last centurv . "

© © © Our contemporary is not quite correct in its date of the rupture between the Grand Orient of France and the Grand Lodge of England , which took place some twenty years ago , as the result of the exclusion from French lodges of the volume of the sacred law , and as a consequence the omission of a declaration of a belief in the Deity .

© © © Bro . Lord Leigh , who unveiled at Stratford-on-Avon the other day a memorial window to Sir Arthur Hodgson , showed little signs of the circumstance that in another fewweeks he will be celebrating his eighty-first birthday : noi would the appearance of Lady Leigh indicate that early in

August last she and her husband were marking the fifty-sixth anniversary of their wedding . Bro . Lord Leigh is certainly one of our most wonderful octogenarians , for there is no one in the county who takes a livelier or more active interest in Warwickshire affairs . Bro . Lord Leigh is the doyen of the Provincial Grand Masters , and still takes a very active part in the ruling and governing of his province .

© © © An American clergyman and a Mason , Bro . the Kev Lorenzo Dow , was once travelling in Asia Minor , and was taken with a slow fever at Smyrna . When he had partially recovered his health , he found himself in rather indigent

circumstances , and , as he was walking out one day , the thought struch him , as strangers were passing by , that there might be some Masons in this far-off land . Somewhat weak and weary , he sat clown by the side of the road , and gave to several travellers , as they passed by , the Masonic

sign of distress , which was not recognized by them . At last seeing a well-dressed gentleman approach , he repeated the sign , to which the gentleman cheerfully responded by

inquiring into his circumstances . The result was that the newly found Masonic brother sent a carriage for him , and conveyed him to his own beautiful palace , took care of him till he had fully recovered his health , paid his hotel bill , previously contracted , and sent him on his way rejoicing . —• The Kcvslonc .

© © ¦;;¦ The question propounded by Sir Alan Seton Steuart ol Touch at Falkirk bazaar recently , as to whether Adam was a Freemason , set a lot of would-be witty persons writing to a Glasgow paper to show that our first parent was an Oddfellow ,

a Free Gardener , a Freethinker , a Free Tailor , and other things , but the " wit" became so heavy and far fetched that the editor summarily closed the correspondence .

© . - Lady Mary Hozier has been presented by the Grand Lodge of Scottish Freemasons with a marble bust of her husband , Bro . the Hon . . lames Hozier , M . P ., in recognition of the hitter ' s services as Grand Master of Scotland during the past foin

years . The bust is the work of Mr . W . Grant Stevenson , R . S . A ., and is a replica of one which is shortly to be placed in the Freemasons' Hall , Edinburgh .

© © © An old Masonic copper seal , which was probably in use over 200 years ago , and which has been found in a perfect state of preservation in an old stone quarry near Biggar . The number 222 corresponds with the number of the Biggar

Knight Templar Order of Freemasonry which was in existence previous to the year 1727 , when the present Biggar Lodge , No . 157 ( Scottish Constitution ) , was constituted by a right from Linlithgow .

© © © The constitution of the Grand Lodge of New York provides that the dispensation for a new lodge shall not he issued without a certificate that the proposed . Master and Wardens have exhibited their work in the three degrees of Craft Masonry .

This provision is generally regarded as wise and necessary . Commenting on this principle , the Masonic Standard says it is a singular circumstance that after a lodge has been once chartered and set to work , the careful supervision of the Grand Lodge respecting competency of officers comes to an end . In practice there is not infrequently a woeful falling off . The

Standard has seen many Masters who not only jiossess an imperfect knowledge of the ritual , but are incapable of presiding over the deliberations of the lodge with even a modicum of credit .

© © © Bro . the Earl of Mount Edgcumbe , Provincial Grand Master of Cornwall , has conferred the rank of Past Provincial Junior Grand Warden upon Bro . Thomas Taylor , P . M . and Secretary of Lodge True and Faithful , No . 318 , Helston ,

in appreciation of his constant interest in Masonry . Bro . Taylor was initiated in True and Faithful Lodge over fortytwo years ago , and was its Worshipful Master in 1866 . In the province he has held the following offices : —P . G . O ., 186 9 ; S . G . D ., 1870 ; and P . G . Treas ., 18 90 . The honour just conferred has given great satisfaction to the local brethren .

Ar01901

SPECIAL XOTE—Owin g lo I he pressure upon our space we arc compelled lo leave lite following reports over until the next issue : —Trafford Lodge , Xo . 1494 . Orpheus Lodge . Xo . iyo 6 . Devonian Lodge , Xo . 2834 . Sheraton Lodge , Xo . , ; o / o , and Prov . Grand Chapter of Hertfordshire .

Ad01902

^ ^ ' : ^^ - ; - ^ ^ -: ^ , ^^/ ^ / v /^^^ WH / SKYIS / MH - -m ¦ m & mmj & " % -. ** v ' ¦ ¦?• ' - ' fr | g ^ ' ^ s ^^ n g £ Jf ; LACK & WHMl | j § J §

“The Masonic Illustrated: 1904-12-01, Page 19” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 9 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mil/issues/mil_01121904/page/19/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
The Province of Cheshire. Article 2
Some Continental Lodge Jewels . Article 4
The Library and Museum of the Grand Lodge of England. Article 7
Some Notes on Freemasonry in Australasia.-(Continued). Article 12
RULERS IN THE CRAFT Article 14
Untitled Ad 15
Untitled Ad 16
Untitled Ad 16
Untitled Ad 16
Music in the Lodge Room. Article 16
At the Sign of the Perfect Ashlar. Article 17
Untitled Article 19
Untitled Ad 19
Music for Christmas. Article 20
Untitled Ad 21
Untitled Ad 21
Untitled Ad 21
Consecration of the Gordon Langton Lodge, No. 3069. Article 22
Untitled Ad 22
Whittington Lodge, No. 862. Article 23
Untitled Ad 23
Kirby Lodge of Instruction, No. 263. Article 24
The Power of the Grip. Article 24
Untitled Ad 24
Untitled Ad 25
Untitled Ad 26
Order of the Temple. Article 26
Untitled Ad 26
Untitled Ad 26
"CHARITY NEVER FAILETH." Article 27
Untitled Article 27
Untitled Ad 28
Untitled Ad 28
Untitled Ad 29
Untitled Ad 29
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

At The Sign Of The Perfect Ashlar.

There can be little doubt that almost every vestige of pure and ancient Masonry has disappeared from the ceremony and ritual , as well as the practice of what still retains the name of Freemasonry in France , and that control of the organisation has been gradually acquired and used by agitators , both political and anti clerical , to carry out , not always too scrupulously , their own particular views .

© <& <& The Standard of November 18 th has the following remarks on the subject : — " Freemasons who are unacquainted with the position of the Craft in France may be surprised and bewildered by the charges made against it lately . That the War Office should consult Provincial Grand Lodges

upon the character and qualifications of officers in the Army , or , indeed , on any other subject , seems grotesque . But there is no doubt of it . General Andre has admitted that he took advice from those bodies and acted on it . The truth is that Freemasonry in France and England are quite different institutions . They were identical at the beginning ; in fact ,

this was one of the many fashions borrowed from us by the French in the 18 th century . Lord Derwentwater is said to have founded the first lodge in Paris , and the Duke of Richmond the second . Lord Stratbmore , Grand Master of England , authorised both of them in 1733 . But the ' Spirit of the Revolution ' soon established itself in the French lodges , as is

not surprising , perhaps , and so transformed them in principles and practice that the Grand Lodge of England formally severed connection carlv in the last centurv . "

© © © Our contemporary is not quite correct in its date of the rupture between the Grand Orient of France and the Grand Lodge of England , which took place some twenty years ago , as the result of the exclusion from French lodges of the volume of the sacred law , and as a consequence the omission of a declaration of a belief in the Deity .

© © © Bro . Lord Leigh , who unveiled at Stratford-on-Avon the other day a memorial window to Sir Arthur Hodgson , showed little signs of the circumstance that in another fewweeks he will be celebrating his eighty-first birthday : noi would the appearance of Lady Leigh indicate that early in

August last she and her husband were marking the fifty-sixth anniversary of their wedding . Bro . Lord Leigh is certainly one of our most wonderful octogenarians , for there is no one in the county who takes a livelier or more active interest in Warwickshire affairs . Bro . Lord Leigh is the doyen of the Provincial Grand Masters , and still takes a very active part in the ruling and governing of his province .

© © © An American clergyman and a Mason , Bro . the Kev Lorenzo Dow , was once travelling in Asia Minor , and was taken with a slow fever at Smyrna . When he had partially recovered his health , he found himself in rather indigent

circumstances , and , as he was walking out one day , the thought struch him , as strangers were passing by , that there might be some Masons in this far-off land . Somewhat weak and weary , he sat clown by the side of the road , and gave to several travellers , as they passed by , the Masonic

sign of distress , which was not recognized by them . At last seeing a well-dressed gentleman approach , he repeated the sign , to which the gentleman cheerfully responded by

inquiring into his circumstances . The result was that the newly found Masonic brother sent a carriage for him , and conveyed him to his own beautiful palace , took care of him till he had fully recovered his health , paid his hotel bill , previously contracted , and sent him on his way rejoicing . —• The Kcvslonc .

© © ¦;;¦ The question propounded by Sir Alan Seton Steuart ol Touch at Falkirk bazaar recently , as to whether Adam was a Freemason , set a lot of would-be witty persons writing to a Glasgow paper to show that our first parent was an Oddfellow ,

a Free Gardener , a Freethinker , a Free Tailor , and other things , but the " wit" became so heavy and far fetched that the editor summarily closed the correspondence .

© . - Lady Mary Hozier has been presented by the Grand Lodge of Scottish Freemasons with a marble bust of her husband , Bro . the Hon . . lames Hozier , M . P ., in recognition of the hitter ' s services as Grand Master of Scotland during the past foin

years . The bust is the work of Mr . W . Grant Stevenson , R . S . A ., and is a replica of one which is shortly to be placed in the Freemasons' Hall , Edinburgh .

© © © An old Masonic copper seal , which was probably in use over 200 years ago , and which has been found in a perfect state of preservation in an old stone quarry near Biggar . The number 222 corresponds with the number of the Biggar

Knight Templar Order of Freemasonry which was in existence previous to the year 1727 , when the present Biggar Lodge , No . 157 ( Scottish Constitution ) , was constituted by a right from Linlithgow .

© © © The constitution of the Grand Lodge of New York provides that the dispensation for a new lodge shall not he issued without a certificate that the proposed . Master and Wardens have exhibited their work in the three degrees of Craft Masonry .

This provision is generally regarded as wise and necessary . Commenting on this principle , the Masonic Standard says it is a singular circumstance that after a lodge has been once chartered and set to work , the careful supervision of the Grand Lodge respecting competency of officers comes to an end . In practice there is not infrequently a woeful falling off . The

Standard has seen many Masters who not only jiossess an imperfect knowledge of the ritual , but are incapable of presiding over the deliberations of the lodge with even a modicum of credit .

© © © Bro . the Earl of Mount Edgcumbe , Provincial Grand Master of Cornwall , has conferred the rank of Past Provincial Junior Grand Warden upon Bro . Thomas Taylor , P . M . and Secretary of Lodge True and Faithful , No . 318 , Helston ,

in appreciation of his constant interest in Masonry . Bro . Taylor was initiated in True and Faithful Lodge over fortytwo years ago , and was its Worshipful Master in 1866 . In the province he has held the following offices : —P . G . O ., 186 9 ; S . G . D ., 1870 ; and P . G . Treas ., 18 90 . The honour just conferred has given great satisfaction to the local brethren .

Ar01901

SPECIAL XOTE—Owin g lo I he pressure upon our space we arc compelled lo leave lite following reports over until the next issue : —Trafford Lodge , Xo . 1494 . Orpheus Lodge . Xo . iyo 6 . Devonian Lodge , Xo . 2834 . Sheraton Lodge , Xo . , ; o / o , and Prov . Grand Chapter of Hertfordshire .

Ad01902

^ ^ ' : ^^ - ; - ^ ^ -: ^ , ^^/ ^ / v /^^^ WH / SKYIS / MH - -m ¦ m & mmj & " % -. ** v ' ¦ ¦?• ' - ' fr | g ^ ' ^ s ^^ n g £ Jf ; LACK & WHMl | j § J §

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