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  • The Masonic Magazine
  • June 1, 1876
  • Page 13
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The Masonic Magazine, June 1, 1876: Page 13

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    Article BROTHER ELLIS'S SKETCH OF PARADISE R.A. CHAPTER , SHEFFIELD. ← Page 3 of 3
    Article SONNET Page 1 of 1
    Article SOCIAL PROBLEMS AND THEIR PEACEFUL SOLUTION. Page 1 of 4 →
Page 13

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

Brother Ellis's Sketch Of Paradise R.A. Chapter , Sheffield.

the titles of the Officers and of the Chapter , and the interesting records of the Sheffield Chapter , evidently form no exception to the rule . We should like to knoAV exceedingly if it appears from the records , by what authority the Mark Masons were advanced

on Nov . 18 th , 1810 . Certainly not by the R . A . Avarrant ; but from about 1770 lodges Avorked the Mark Masters frequently by their own authority , any legitimate number of Mark Masons , apparently doing so under the adopted wing of a Craft warrant ,

We reserve any further remarks on the subject , until the second portion of the extracts has appeared , and Ave again desire to express our hearty approval of the careful manner in Avhich Brother Ellis has transcribed the Records , and to thank him

most warmly for his services on behalf of Masonic Archseology . The history of Royal Arch Masonry in England has yet to be Avritten , and if other Brethren having similar opportunities , will oidy do as Brother Ellis has done so Avell , we shall not long be in Avant of materials to . compose a history of that modern Society .

Sonnet

SONNET

On reading the Minutes of some old Lodges in the " Masonic Magazine . " BY BRO . REV . M . GORBON . 0 BRAA'E old woodextending many a rood ;

, Oft in thine aged precincts have I stroll'd , While wav'd thy venerable arms full bold , In green old age , high o ' er a pebbly flood . 1 love to trace the age—in thee , ag'd

wood—Of each particular gnarled oak , and old ; Though oaks , like kindred growths , irom days untold In many a sylvan home , like thine , have stood ;

Oaks fair as thine . So do I love , as well , To penetrate the dark antiquity Of Lodges old as thine , old oaks ; although For periods , whose duration none can tell , Lodges , ' ere these , were broadcast sown and free , And in all lands as mig htily did grow .

Social Problems And Their Peaceful Solution.

SOCIAL PROBLEMS AND THEIR PEACEFUL SOLUTION .

BY BRO . REV . W . TEBBS . " A good man , .... that ruleth well his own house will guide his affairs with discretion . " EVEN in the days of our Avise Grand Master it Avas a well-knoAvn fact that it was the

unconsidered " dead flies that caused the ointment of the apothecary to give a stinking savour , " rendering Avorthless by their unwelcome presence the product of all his care and skill . So now-a-days though the ship of the State may be under

an able commander , safely piloted amidst the breakers of war or the sunken rocks of intestine commotion , yet in many a cabin there may be anything but peace and contentment . Now this is exactly our present position ; we are at peace with -all the

world ; happy and prosperous to a degree ; but in the more private affairs of the country—indeed within our very homesthere seems to be some hidden process at work , by which . our very lives , thusfavoured though they beseem to be so harassed as

, hardly to be worth the living . Ours be it , in the course of our investigations , to dive into these inner recesses of our national household , and to see Avhether to the social problems of the day , which seem to be putting the times altogether out of

joint , we cannot find some solution to offer . The question that first occurs to us , as affecting us all directly or indirectly , is that of

CREATION AND RECREATION . " Whatsoever thy hand findeth to do , do it with thy might , " Showed the value that the Royal Solomon put upon thoroughness ; and it is a want of this very quality-thoroughness ( a quality which it has ever been our boast that we

possessed , but Avhich now , alas , but too often finds its perfection only in the boast , ) which is at the root of half the mischief that we have started to consider . Work is the normal condition of mankind , and since the sentence of hard labour

passed on Adam , everyone of his descendants has his allotted task , if he will but apply himself to it . None need , or ought , to be idle , for in whatever position of life a man be placed , there is certainly some

“The Masonic Magazine: 1876-06-01, Page 13” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 25 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01061876/page/13/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
Untitled Article 2
Monthly Masonic Summary. Article 3
THE LEGEND OF THE HOLY THORN OF GLASTONBURY. Article 4
"THE HOLY THORN." Article 10
BROTHER ELLIS'S SKETCH OF PARADISE R.A. CHAPTER , SHEFFIELD. Article 11
SONNET Article 13
SOCIAL PROBLEMS AND THEIR PEACEFUL SOLUTION. Article 13
AN ITALIAN COUNT. Article 16
NOTES ON THE OLD MINUTE BOOKS OF THE BRITISH UNION LODGE, No. 114, IPSWICH. A.D. 1762. Article 19
SEA-SIDE DREAMINGS. Article 22
THE WOMEN OF OUR TIME. Article 22
HOW RAILWAY MATERIALS ARE TESTED. Article 24
T' SPELLIN' BEE. Article 26
DU ROLE DE LA FRANCMACONNERIE DANS L'AVENIR. Article 26
FAIRY TALES UTILISED FOR THE NEW GENERATION. Article 28
ODDS AND ENDS OF WIT AND HUMOUR. Article 30
CONTEMPORARY LETTERS ON THE FRENCH REVOLUTION. Article 37
THE ORIGIN AND REFERENCES OF THE HERMESIAN SPURIOUS FREEMASONRY. Article 39
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE AND ART. Article 47
THE OLD FRIENDS. Article 50
GOLD. Article 50
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Brother Ellis's Sketch Of Paradise R.A. Chapter , Sheffield.

the titles of the Officers and of the Chapter , and the interesting records of the Sheffield Chapter , evidently form no exception to the rule . We should like to knoAV exceedingly if it appears from the records , by what authority the Mark Masons were advanced

on Nov . 18 th , 1810 . Certainly not by the R . A . Avarrant ; but from about 1770 lodges Avorked the Mark Masters frequently by their own authority , any legitimate number of Mark Masons , apparently doing so under the adopted wing of a Craft warrant ,

We reserve any further remarks on the subject , until the second portion of the extracts has appeared , and Ave again desire to express our hearty approval of the careful manner in Avhich Brother Ellis has transcribed the Records , and to thank him

most warmly for his services on behalf of Masonic Archseology . The history of Royal Arch Masonry in England has yet to be Avritten , and if other Brethren having similar opportunities , will oidy do as Brother Ellis has done so Avell , we shall not long be in Avant of materials to . compose a history of that modern Society .

Sonnet

SONNET

On reading the Minutes of some old Lodges in the " Masonic Magazine . " BY BRO . REV . M . GORBON . 0 BRAA'E old woodextending many a rood ;

, Oft in thine aged precincts have I stroll'd , While wav'd thy venerable arms full bold , In green old age , high o ' er a pebbly flood . 1 love to trace the age—in thee , ag'd

wood—Of each particular gnarled oak , and old ; Though oaks , like kindred growths , irom days untold In many a sylvan home , like thine , have stood ;

Oaks fair as thine . So do I love , as well , To penetrate the dark antiquity Of Lodges old as thine , old oaks ; although For periods , whose duration none can tell , Lodges , ' ere these , were broadcast sown and free , And in all lands as mig htily did grow .

Social Problems And Their Peaceful Solution.

SOCIAL PROBLEMS AND THEIR PEACEFUL SOLUTION .

BY BRO . REV . W . TEBBS . " A good man , .... that ruleth well his own house will guide his affairs with discretion . " EVEN in the days of our Avise Grand Master it Avas a well-knoAvn fact that it was the

unconsidered " dead flies that caused the ointment of the apothecary to give a stinking savour , " rendering Avorthless by their unwelcome presence the product of all his care and skill . So now-a-days though the ship of the State may be under

an able commander , safely piloted amidst the breakers of war or the sunken rocks of intestine commotion , yet in many a cabin there may be anything but peace and contentment . Now this is exactly our present position ; we are at peace with -all the

world ; happy and prosperous to a degree ; but in the more private affairs of the country—indeed within our very homesthere seems to be some hidden process at work , by which . our very lives , thusfavoured though they beseem to be so harassed as

, hardly to be worth the living . Ours be it , in the course of our investigations , to dive into these inner recesses of our national household , and to see Avhether to the social problems of the day , which seem to be putting the times altogether out of

joint , we cannot find some solution to offer . The question that first occurs to us , as affecting us all directly or indirectly , is that of

CREATION AND RECREATION . " Whatsoever thy hand findeth to do , do it with thy might , " Showed the value that the Royal Solomon put upon thoroughness ; and it is a want of this very quality-thoroughness ( a quality which it has ever been our boast that we

possessed , but Avhich now , alas , but too often finds its perfection only in the boast , ) which is at the root of half the mischief that we have started to consider . Work is the normal condition of mankind , and since the sentence of hard labour

passed on Adam , everyone of his descendants has his allotted task , if he will but apply himself to it . None need , or ought , to be idle , for in whatever position of life a man be placed , there is certainly some

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