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  • March 1, 1882
  • Page 24
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The Masonic Magazine, March 1, 1882: Page 24

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    Article THE WORSHIPFUL MASTER. ← Page 2 of 6 →
Page 24

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

The Worshipful Master.

The two young men had been attending the Lodge of Harmony , which was known as the Gentlemen ' s Lodge , in Gippingswick ; and Dr . Penhaligon had been duly nominated as a fit ancl proper person to become a Mason—to be ballotted for and , if approved , duly initiated into the mysteries of Antient Freemasonry at the next regular lodge meeting . Dr . Carlyon drily remarked that Bro . Jamiesonin proposing his friend

, , should be careful to give him his proper title , as he was not a Doctor at all , but only Bachelor of Medicine . Bro . Jamieson apologised , and said he thought he was a Doctor by courtesy ; and some one muttered in a perfectly audible whisper that , as Dr . Carlyon was only a Licentiate of the College of Physicians , he hacl no more right to be called Doctor than the gentleman whose claim to the title he had impugned .

The Master ' s gavel called the brethren to order ; the Secretary took a note of the nomination ; and the other business of the lodge having been disposed of , it was closed with solemn prayer and in ancient form , and the brethren adjourned to the banqueting room for the usual monthly symposium . Thus it was that Mr . Wroath came to the conclusion that the ballot possibly might not be clear the next lodge nightand as he hacl taken a great

, fancy to Dr . Penhaligon , to give him his courtesy title , he was naturally anxious that his advent into the town should not be signalised by his being black-balled at the lodge , which would probably have injured him very much in his professional career .

CHAPTEE II . THE FEAST OF ROSES . THE Lodge of Harmony met always on the Monday before full moon , and in the month of June , or about St . John ' s Day , was celebrated the Feast of Roses . No one could tell the ori gin of this feast . The lodge was a hundred years oldand the brethren wore with pride their centenary jewelsbut

, , whether for all those hundred years the Feast of Roses hacl been annually held , or whether it was an invention within the memory of the oldest inhabitant , no one knew . The old minute books hacl been ransacked by one or two learned brothers , but -without finding any evidence , except of the culpable neglect with which they had been kept towards the close of 1700—evidence which betrayed that

they had got into the hands of the butterman ; pages and pages of what might have been valuable Masonic records being torn out , greasy marks here and there , school-boy jargon scrawled across some of the minutes , ancl material evidence generally that they had certainly not been cared for ancl preserved as they ought to have been . Nothing of the Feast of Roses could be foundbut it was suggested that as

, a Knight Templar encampment had been held for over seventy years in connection with the lodge , and as the Rose Croix used to be given as an appendant degree , it was more than probable that its ori gin might be traced to the brethren of the Rosy Cross . However that mi ght be , the brethren of the Lodge of Harmony duly honoured the festival , and but few troubled themselves as to why or wherefore it was kept .

It was at this meeting Dr . Penhaligon was to be initiated , supposing him to be accepted ; ancl there was a large muster of the brethren . The Lodge of Harmony was a very exclusive lodge , and boasted that its members were the crsme de la areme of Masonry . Were not the Provincial Grand Master , the Earl of Mount Stuart and his Deputy , the Rev . Dr . Oldham , members ? and was not a noble Lord , son of the Marquis of Earsdon , to be initiated that very night ? The lodge room was handsome and well appointed , with two beautifully wrought pillars , in plaster of Paris , at the entrance , the mould of which had

“The Masonic Magazine: 1882-03-01, Page 24” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 26 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01031882/page/24/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
THE CARDINAL VIRTUES. Article 1
MAIDENHOOD. Article 6
DOCUMENTA LATOMICA INEDITA. Article 7
THE ROMAN COLLEGIA. Article 12
MEMOIR OF ELIAS ASHMOLE. Article 14
AN ARCHITECTURAL PUZZLE. Article 19
THE SUNDERLAND AND HAMILTON-BECKFORD LIBRARIES. Article 20
THE WORSHIPFUL MASTER. Article 23
NATIONAL SAXON MASONIC HYMN. Article 29
ECHOES OF THE LAST CENTURY. Article 30
LITERARY GOSSIP. Article 34
THE LEGENDS OF THE CRAFT. Article 36
A CURIOUS CORRESPONDENCE. Article 37
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

The Worshipful Master.

The two young men had been attending the Lodge of Harmony , which was known as the Gentlemen ' s Lodge , in Gippingswick ; and Dr . Penhaligon had been duly nominated as a fit ancl proper person to become a Mason—to be ballotted for and , if approved , duly initiated into the mysteries of Antient Freemasonry at the next regular lodge meeting . Dr . Carlyon drily remarked that Bro . Jamiesonin proposing his friend

, , should be careful to give him his proper title , as he was not a Doctor at all , but only Bachelor of Medicine . Bro . Jamieson apologised , and said he thought he was a Doctor by courtesy ; and some one muttered in a perfectly audible whisper that , as Dr . Carlyon was only a Licentiate of the College of Physicians , he hacl no more right to be called Doctor than the gentleman whose claim to the title he had impugned .

The Master ' s gavel called the brethren to order ; the Secretary took a note of the nomination ; and the other business of the lodge having been disposed of , it was closed with solemn prayer and in ancient form , and the brethren adjourned to the banqueting room for the usual monthly symposium . Thus it was that Mr . Wroath came to the conclusion that the ballot possibly might not be clear the next lodge nightand as he hacl taken a great

, fancy to Dr . Penhaligon , to give him his courtesy title , he was naturally anxious that his advent into the town should not be signalised by his being black-balled at the lodge , which would probably have injured him very much in his professional career .

CHAPTEE II . THE FEAST OF ROSES . THE Lodge of Harmony met always on the Monday before full moon , and in the month of June , or about St . John ' s Day , was celebrated the Feast of Roses . No one could tell the ori gin of this feast . The lodge was a hundred years oldand the brethren wore with pride their centenary jewelsbut

, , whether for all those hundred years the Feast of Roses hacl been annually held , or whether it was an invention within the memory of the oldest inhabitant , no one knew . The old minute books hacl been ransacked by one or two learned brothers , but -without finding any evidence , except of the culpable neglect with which they had been kept towards the close of 1700—evidence which betrayed that

they had got into the hands of the butterman ; pages and pages of what might have been valuable Masonic records being torn out , greasy marks here and there , school-boy jargon scrawled across some of the minutes , ancl material evidence generally that they had certainly not been cared for ancl preserved as they ought to have been . Nothing of the Feast of Roses could be foundbut it was suggested that as

, a Knight Templar encampment had been held for over seventy years in connection with the lodge , and as the Rose Croix used to be given as an appendant degree , it was more than probable that its ori gin might be traced to the brethren of the Rosy Cross . However that mi ght be , the brethren of the Lodge of Harmony duly honoured the festival , and but few troubled themselves as to why or wherefore it was kept .

It was at this meeting Dr . Penhaligon was to be initiated , supposing him to be accepted ; ancl there was a large muster of the brethren . The Lodge of Harmony was a very exclusive lodge , and boasted that its members were the crsme de la areme of Masonry . Were not the Provincial Grand Master , the Earl of Mount Stuart and his Deputy , the Rev . Dr . Oldham , members ? and was not a noble Lord , son of the Marquis of Earsdon , to be initiated that very night ? The lodge room was handsome and well appointed , with two beautifully wrought pillars , in plaster of Paris , at the entrance , the mould of which had

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