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  • May 1, 1875
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The Masonic Magazine, May 1, 1875: Page 1

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Monthly Masonic Summary.

Monthly Masonic Summary .

Before we shall meet our readers again the Installation of the Prince of Wales as Grand Master will have taken place , amid the loyal enthusiasm of our order . Everything points to a most successful and rejoicing assembly , such as has never been

seen before , and which English Freemasonry " pour les longues annces ne reverra pas . " Prince Leopold has received his third degree , aud the Duke of Connaught will have received it before our readers will

peruse these lines , so that the Prince of Wales will be , like George Prince of Wales , surrounded by his royal brothers , and we shall be reminded of goodly meetings in times long gone and past .

It is satisfactory to note how clear and straig htforward is the position which English Freemasonry assumes , alike to the great pride of its friends , and according to the reluctant admission of its foes .

English Freemasonry , unlike some other foreign bodies studiously eschews political question and abnormal topics , and confines itself to its own mission and its proper duty . Foreign Freemasons sometimes complain of their own authorities , as looking with an unfavourable eye on

themselves and their Masonic labours . In seven cases out of ten the fault is with the Freemasons , not with the lawful authorities . For foreign Freemasons are apt to forget that Freemasonry is a secret society , and that all governments have a

right to object to secret societies discussing the affairs of the State , Now some of our foreign Brethren are most unwise in this respect . They discuss in their Lodges habituall y the most " vexatas quajstiones " of Government and order and social polit y , and

national interests , all which are beyond the sphere of Freemasonry , and they wonder , " That Kings and Courts are watching o ' er their state , And some will doubt , and others will

debate "whether Freemasonry is a safe institution to foster or to patronize . Let the foreign Freemasons imitate us benighted English Freemasons , and they need fear no more any Government's objection .

Masonic literature has received a great addition by the superb Memorial Volume of the Philadelphia Masonic Hall Dedication . It is a credit to American printers , and , above all , to the Superintending

Committee , and to American Freemasonry . The Committee is composed of some of the most distinguished brethren of Pennsylvania . We congratulate them on the re- . suit of their " magnum opus , " and the greater work it so fitly commemorates . L'affaire Bradlaugh has taken a new

phase , in that it appears he was received into a French lodge in 1862 , under the Grand Orient of France , though that lodge is apparently no longer on the official list . This , however , does not , as far as we are concerneddo away with the original

, vicious admission . The High Cross Lodge Brethren are , to a certain extent , relieved from their share of the impropriety of the proceedings , as they received him on the faith of his French certificate . It is a

very untoward event , look at it in whatever lig ht we may . A surreptitious certificate has been published in the Freemason of April 17 th , which must alarm all orderloving Freemasons , and is a great disgrace to its conoocters and issuers .

We shall give our readers a full account of the installation next month . We may remind our readers , that Bro . Hartey has published a very striking lithograph of our Grand Master in his clothing .

We will publish next month a portion of D'Assigny's rare pamphlet , by Bro . Hughan ' s kind permission . X

“The Masonic Magazine: 1875-05-01, Page 1” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 25 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01051875/page/1/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
Monthly Masonic Summary. Article 1
FREEMASONRY CONSIDERED IN ITS RELATION TO SOCIETY. Article 2
MURIEL HALSIE. Article 7
DAFFODILS. Article 12
LES MACONS INDIFFERENTS.* Article 12
OLD LONDON TAVERNS IDENTIFIED WITH MASONRY. Article 14
PADDY'S EXPERIENCE OF ' MASONRY. Article 18
POLLY RIVERS'S TRIP TE STOWSLAY CATTLE SHOW, AN' WHAT COM ON'T. * Article 19
AN ORIGINAL DISSERTATION ON PUBLIC SPEAKING. Article 22
LABOUR. Article 28
"LITTLE DAN." Article 28
Review. Article 29
MARK TWAIN'S ENCOUNTER WITH AN INTERVIEWER. Article 31
LOSSES. Article 31
A SYNOPSIS OF MASONIC PERSECUTION IN THE XVIII. CENTURY. Article 32
BE HAPPY AS YOU CAN. Article 32
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Monthly Masonic Summary.

Monthly Masonic Summary .

Before we shall meet our readers again the Installation of the Prince of Wales as Grand Master will have taken place , amid the loyal enthusiasm of our order . Everything points to a most successful and rejoicing assembly , such as has never been

seen before , and which English Freemasonry " pour les longues annces ne reverra pas . " Prince Leopold has received his third degree , aud the Duke of Connaught will have received it before our readers will

peruse these lines , so that the Prince of Wales will be , like George Prince of Wales , surrounded by his royal brothers , and we shall be reminded of goodly meetings in times long gone and past .

It is satisfactory to note how clear and straig htforward is the position which English Freemasonry assumes , alike to the great pride of its friends , and according to the reluctant admission of its foes .

English Freemasonry , unlike some other foreign bodies studiously eschews political question and abnormal topics , and confines itself to its own mission and its proper duty . Foreign Freemasons sometimes complain of their own authorities , as looking with an unfavourable eye on

themselves and their Masonic labours . In seven cases out of ten the fault is with the Freemasons , not with the lawful authorities . For foreign Freemasons are apt to forget that Freemasonry is a secret society , and that all governments have a

right to object to secret societies discussing the affairs of the State , Now some of our foreign Brethren are most unwise in this respect . They discuss in their Lodges habituall y the most " vexatas quajstiones " of Government and order and social polit y , and

national interests , all which are beyond the sphere of Freemasonry , and they wonder , " That Kings and Courts are watching o ' er their state , And some will doubt , and others will

debate "whether Freemasonry is a safe institution to foster or to patronize . Let the foreign Freemasons imitate us benighted English Freemasons , and they need fear no more any Government's objection .

Masonic literature has received a great addition by the superb Memorial Volume of the Philadelphia Masonic Hall Dedication . It is a credit to American printers , and , above all , to the Superintending

Committee , and to American Freemasonry . The Committee is composed of some of the most distinguished brethren of Pennsylvania . We congratulate them on the re- . suit of their " magnum opus , " and the greater work it so fitly commemorates . L'affaire Bradlaugh has taken a new

phase , in that it appears he was received into a French lodge in 1862 , under the Grand Orient of France , though that lodge is apparently no longer on the official list . This , however , does not , as far as we are concerneddo away with the original

, vicious admission . The High Cross Lodge Brethren are , to a certain extent , relieved from their share of the impropriety of the proceedings , as they received him on the faith of his French certificate . It is a

very untoward event , look at it in whatever lig ht we may . A surreptitious certificate has been published in the Freemason of April 17 th , which must alarm all orderloving Freemasons , and is a great disgrace to its conoocters and issuers .

We shall give our readers a full account of the installation next month . We may remind our readers , that Bro . Hartey has published a very striking lithograph of our Grand Master in his clothing .

We will publish next month a portion of D'Assigny's rare pamphlet , by Bro . Hughan ' s kind permission . X

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