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  • The Masonic Magazine
  • Aug. 1, 1876
  • Page 14
  • SOCIAL PROBLEMS AND THEIR PEACEFUL SOLUTION.
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The Masonic Magazine, Aug. 1, 1876: Page 14

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    Article MAY MASON. ← Page 6 of 6
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Page 14

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

May Mason.

" So do I need you ten times more than she . " " Do you 1 You are looking very well May moaned and grieved for me day and night , until she was worn to a shadow , and you did not even get sick , said Rica , " saucily .

" I did not suppose you would go out as a nurse among the Masons , " said he , with a frown . " I would not , had they all been like you , " she retorted , with a pout . " Mr . Gerard converted me , " she added ,

mischievously . 'Thanks to Mr . Gerard , " said Hugh , dryly , " and I will take the new convert to my heart . " " You will have to take May , if you take me" said Ricasoberly . " We are not to

, , be separated again . " " We might open an asylum for unfortunate Masonic orphans , " said Hugh , with an air of resignation . " We , indeed 1 You may consider yourself fortunate if you are taken in as

an ' unfortunate , ' sir . " " Taken in , I may be , but unfortunate no more ; thanks to little May Mason's influence over her 'Anti-Masonic' Auntie . "

Social Problems And Their Peaceful Solution.

SOCIAL PROBLEMS AND THEIR PEACEFUL SOLUTION .

BY BRO . REV . W . TEBBS . III . TEMPERANCE . * " God causeth ... to grow ., that He may bring forth food and -wine that maketh glad the heart of man . "

" 'Wine is a mocker , strong drink is raging . " WHAT says a follower of the Royal Solomon 1— " Wine is as good as life to a man , if it be drunk moderately ; what life is then to a man that is without wine 1 for it was made to make men glad . Wine

measurably drunk , and in season , bringeth gladness of the heart and cheerfulness of the mind . But wine drunken with excess maketh bitterness of the mind with brawling and quarrelling . " In this burning question of the day , then , we must

distinguish carefully between use and abuse . But what , one might say , has this question , however important it may be , to do with social , or in other words the national , prosperity 1 Surely it is purely a matter for individuals . Granted ! but inasmuch as the nation is a body corporate made up of individual units , so whatever affects those individual units

affects , in the long run , the corporate body ; and , thus , this question of Temperance , inasmuch as it affects the processes of Creation and Recreation , by which our national work is clone , by deteriorating the one by an abuse of the other , is of most material importance to the nation at

large . To return for a moment to our old simile of the machine , we know that if it is to prove of lasting use , it must remain in good working order , and to this end every part of it must be of the best quality ,

and must be carefully preserved in this condition . Now as one— -and that a most important part of our machine—is the working classes , and as it is to them that our attention is just now more particularly directed , it is important to see how this question of Temperance affects them , for

it is upon them quite as much as upon any other class of the community that our national prosperity depends . At this present time we know by sad experience that drink is the ruin of thousands in all classes of society , and we shall do well to inquire firstwhether the custom

, of drinking alcoholic liquors is , or is not , beneficial . If it be not , stop it at once , and our subject is at an end 1 If it be , then let us discover in what way we can control it and prevent its abuse . Now , it is quite clear that if wine—and

under this name we may for our present purpose recognise other forms of consumable alcohol — were not beneficial we should find its use distinctl y forbidden in Holy Scripture ; but the very reverse is the case , for we find its use as a medicine recommended by St . Paul ; we find its use as a food pointed out by the Psalmist ;

“The Masonic Magazine: 1876-08-01, Page 14” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 24 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01081876/page/14/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
Untitled Article 2
Untitled Article 2
Monthly Masonic Summary. Article 3
THE DAFFODIL. Article 3
THE EARLY INDICIAE OF FREEMASONRY. Article 4
AN EARLY MASONIC BOOK. Article 5
SONNET. Article 9
MAY MASON. Article 9
SOCIAL PROBLEMS AND THEIR PEACEFUL SOLUTION. Article 14
SONNET. Article 19
AN OLD, OLD STORY. Article 19
THE WOMEN OF OUR TIME. Article 21
MASONIC AMATEUR PERFORMANCES AT PLYMOUTH. Article 23
NOTES ON THE OLD MINUTES OF BRITISH UNION LODGE, IPSWICH. Article 26
AMERICAN KNIGHTS TEMPLARS Article 27
ZOROASTRIANISM AND FREEMASONRY. Article 30
THE FALLING SNOW. Article 33
FAIRY TALES UTILISED FOR THE NEW GENERATION. Article 33
THE ORIGIN AND REFERENCES OF THE HERMESIAN SPURIOUS FREEMASONRY. Article 34
Our Archaological Corner. Article 37
MASONIC ARCHAEOLOGICAL NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 39
SERMON Article 41
REVIEW. Article 43
SOMEHOW OR OTHER. Article 45
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART. Article 45
HYMN. Article 50
Untitled Article 51
Untitled Article 52
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

May Mason.

" So do I need you ten times more than she . " " Do you 1 You are looking very well May moaned and grieved for me day and night , until she was worn to a shadow , and you did not even get sick , said Rica , " saucily .

" I did not suppose you would go out as a nurse among the Masons , " said he , with a frown . " I would not , had they all been like you , " she retorted , with a pout . " Mr . Gerard converted me , " she added ,

mischievously . 'Thanks to Mr . Gerard , " said Hugh , dryly , " and I will take the new convert to my heart . " " You will have to take May , if you take me" said Ricasoberly . " We are not to

, , be separated again . " " We might open an asylum for unfortunate Masonic orphans , " said Hugh , with an air of resignation . " We , indeed 1 You may consider yourself fortunate if you are taken in as

an ' unfortunate , ' sir . " " Taken in , I may be , but unfortunate no more ; thanks to little May Mason's influence over her 'Anti-Masonic' Auntie . "

Social Problems And Their Peaceful Solution.

SOCIAL PROBLEMS AND THEIR PEACEFUL SOLUTION .

BY BRO . REV . W . TEBBS . III . TEMPERANCE . * " God causeth ... to grow ., that He may bring forth food and -wine that maketh glad the heart of man . "

" 'Wine is a mocker , strong drink is raging . " WHAT says a follower of the Royal Solomon 1— " Wine is as good as life to a man , if it be drunk moderately ; what life is then to a man that is without wine 1 for it was made to make men glad . Wine

measurably drunk , and in season , bringeth gladness of the heart and cheerfulness of the mind . But wine drunken with excess maketh bitterness of the mind with brawling and quarrelling . " In this burning question of the day , then , we must

distinguish carefully between use and abuse . But what , one might say , has this question , however important it may be , to do with social , or in other words the national , prosperity 1 Surely it is purely a matter for individuals . Granted ! but inasmuch as the nation is a body corporate made up of individual units , so whatever affects those individual units

affects , in the long run , the corporate body ; and , thus , this question of Temperance , inasmuch as it affects the processes of Creation and Recreation , by which our national work is clone , by deteriorating the one by an abuse of the other , is of most material importance to the nation at

large . To return for a moment to our old simile of the machine , we know that if it is to prove of lasting use , it must remain in good working order , and to this end every part of it must be of the best quality ,

and must be carefully preserved in this condition . Now as one— -and that a most important part of our machine—is the working classes , and as it is to them that our attention is just now more particularly directed , it is important to see how this question of Temperance affects them , for

it is upon them quite as much as upon any other class of the community that our national prosperity depends . At this present time we know by sad experience that drink is the ruin of thousands in all classes of society , and we shall do well to inquire firstwhether the custom

, of drinking alcoholic liquors is , or is not , beneficial . If it be not , stop it at once , and our subject is at an end 1 If it be , then let us discover in what way we can control it and prevent its abuse . Now , it is quite clear that if wine—and

under this name we may for our present purpose recognise other forms of consumable alcohol — were not beneficial we should find its use distinctl y forbidden in Holy Scripture ; but the very reverse is the case , for we find its use as a medicine recommended by St . Paul ; we find its use as a food pointed out by the Psalmist ;

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