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  • May 1, 1858
  • Page 98
  • TO CORRESPONDENTS.
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, May 1, 1858: Page 98

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Page 98

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

To Correspondents.

TO CORRESPONDENTS .

Notes and Queries on Eeeemason ^ tlie following passage ? " The whole bubble of Ereemasohfy was shattered in a paper , wdiich I myself threw into a London journal about the year 1828 or 1824 . It was apaper in this sense mine , that frona me it had received fo but the materials belonged to a learned German , Von Buhle ; the same th the Bipont Aristotle , ' and wrote a history of philosophy . No German has any conception of style . I , therefore , did him the favour to wash his dirty nice , and

make him presentable among Christians ; but the substance was drawn entirely frond this German book , It was there established that the whole hoax of Masonry had been invented in the year 1629 , byx > ne A posure could havedropped out of remembrance , is , probably , that it h the public ear , partly because the journal had a limited circulation , but much morebecause title of the paper ^ Si not sp constructed as to indica ^ to throw out any promises of gratification to malice ; " - — " Studies of Secret Records , ' ¦ ¦ ' . ¦ by Thomas de Quincey ) 1858 , p . 267 . ' -H (^' - . Mi ^ le \ js . work ever been translated ? or ' is there wiyother nofa hesidesJ ^ eQitmeey ' sP E , C . ff

[ De Quineey ' s paper , signed X . Y . Z ., is entitled His tori co-Critical Inquiry into the Origin b ^ the fyndon M January , February , March , and June ; 1824 ^ vol . ix . > pp . I , 140 , 256 , and 652 ^ This paper is an abstract and fo ^ slsMon of the German work on this subject , by Professor J . G . Buhle , which is an expansion of

a Latin dissertation read by the professor , in the year 1803 , to the Philosophical Society of Gottingen . Portions of this paper have been reprinted in the Preemason ^ Mdgazyne of March and April , Buhle ' s work has been extensively used by George Soane , in his e < New Curiosities of Literature , "but with very slight acknowledgment . ]

GoBMAaoM , GregOKJANS , Antigallics , Bucks , & c . —Information relative to the principles and practices of all , or any , of these Societies , would be of great value to those , who are , like the querist , intei-esfced in the manners of the last century . To save trouble , the writer knows what has been said of them in the Gentleman ' s Magazine , Steevens ' s t 4 Hogarth , " the ' Dunciad , " Freemasons ' Magazine , Sec . M . C .

Stability Lodge or Insteuotion . —The recent festival held was in celebration of its . forty-first anniversary—not twenty-first , as stated by our reporter . CxiNADA . —We have received a \ further correspondence between the Grand Secretary , Bro . Gray Clarke , and Bro . Harington , late Prov . G . M . for Quebec and the Three Rivers , which shall appear next week .

Lex . '—We are of opinion that the Lodge has no right to pass a by-law providing for regular Lodge nights , and Master Masons' Lodges ; the latter cannot be required regularly , excepting it be for instruction , as the only business that could be performed w ould be raisings , for which purpose it would be better and more regular to call a Lodge of emergency . The minutes of the regular Lodge could not be confirmed at such a meeting , nor at any meeting from which even the youngest member was excluded .

Bro . J . W . H . Tidswell writes to deny that Bro . Pocklington introduced the present system of working in the Hundred of Elloe Lodge , as stated at a recent meeting of the Lodge of Harmony . He also complains that Bro . Pocklington has taken credit to himself for a lecture formerly delivered by him ( Brof Ticjswell ) . The letter is , however , too personal for publication .

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1858-05-01, Page 98” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 16 July 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/frm_01051858/page/98/.
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Title Category Page
GRAND LODGE AND FESTIVAL. Article 1
FREEMASONRY AND ARCHITECTURE. Article 4
A MASONIC MARTYR—HYPPOLITO JOSE DA COSTA. Article 7
ODE TO MASONRY. Article 12
OUR ARCHITECTURAL SUMMARY. Article 13
REVIEWS OF NEW BOOKS. Article 16
THE MASONIC MIRRIOR. Article 22
PROVINCIAL Article 31
ROYAL ARCH Article 40
MARK MASONRY Article 41
AMERICA Article 44
MASONIC FESTIVITIES Article 48
THE WEEK. Article 48
Obituary. Article 50
NOTICES. Article 50
MASONIC IMPOSTURESS Article 51
SONGS OF THE CRAFT. Article 54
THE ANCIENT MYSTERIES. Article 67
OUR ARCHITECTURAL CHAPTER. Article 74
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 78
CHARITY. Article 81
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 82
PROVINCIAL Article 85
EOYAL ARCH Article 91
KNIGHTS TEMPLAR Article 93
FINE ARTS Article 94
THE WEEK Article 94
Obituary Article 97
NOTICES. Article 97
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 98
PEOVINCIAL GRAND LODGES. Article 99
FREEMASONS' GIRLS' SCHOOL. Article 102
UNIFORMITY OF WORKING. Article 103
THE CANADAS. Article 108
OUR ARCHITECTURAL CHAPTER. Article 115
THE MASONIC MIRR0R. Article 119
METROPOL ITAN Article 124
PROVINCIAL Article 129
ROYAL ARCH, Article 133
MARKMASONRY Article 135
KNIIGHTS TEMPLAR. Article 136
SCOTLAND. Article 141
THE WEEK Article 142
NOTICES. Article 146
THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR: Article 147
among their ranks were many learned eccl... Article 149
TIDINGS FROM THE CRAFT IN THE UNITED STATES. Article 161
OUR ARCHITECTURAL OHAPTER. Article 164
CORRESPONDENCE Article 168
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 171
PROVINCIAL Article 179
ROYAL ARCH Article 182
COLONIAL. Article 183
THE WEEK. Article 192
NOTICES. Article 193
TO CGEEESPONDENTS. Article 194
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Page 98

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

To Correspondents.

TO CORRESPONDENTS .

Notes and Queries on Eeeemason ^ tlie following passage ? " The whole bubble of Ereemasohfy was shattered in a paper , wdiich I myself threw into a London journal about the year 1828 or 1824 . It was apaper in this sense mine , that frona me it had received fo but the materials belonged to a learned German , Von Buhle ; the same th the Bipont Aristotle , ' and wrote a history of philosophy . No German has any conception of style . I , therefore , did him the favour to wash his dirty nice , and

make him presentable among Christians ; but the substance was drawn entirely frond this German book , It was there established that the whole hoax of Masonry had been invented in the year 1629 , byx > ne A posure could havedropped out of remembrance , is , probably , that it h the public ear , partly because the journal had a limited circulation , but much morebecause title of the paper ^ Si not sp constructed as to indica ^ to throw out any promises of gratification to malice ; " - — " Studies of Secret Records , ' ¦ ¦ ' . ¦ by Thomas de Quincey ) 1858 , p . 267 . ' -H (^' - . Mi ^ le \ js . work ever been translated ? or ' is there wiyother nofa hesidesJ ^ eQitmeey ' sP E , C . ff

[ De Quineey ' s paper , signed X . Y . Z ., is entitled His tori co-Critical Inquiry into the Origin b ^ the fyndon M January , February , March , and June ; 1824 ^ vol . ix . > pp . I , 140 , 256 , and 652 ^ This paper is an abstract and fo ^ slsMon of the German work on this subject , by Professor J . G . Buhle , which is an expansion of

a Latin dissertation read by the professor , in the year 1803 , to the Philosophical Society of Gottingen . Portions of this paper have been reprinted in the Preemason ^ Mdgazyne of March and April , Buhle ' s work has been extensively used by George Soane , in his e < New Curiosities of Literature , "but with very slight acknowledgment . ]

GoBMAaoM , GregOKJANS , Antigallics , Bucks , & c . —Information relative to the principles and practices of all , or any , of these Societies , would be of great value to those , who are , like the querist , intei-esfced in the manners of the last century . To save trouble , the writer knows what has been said of them in the Gentleman ' s Magazine , Steevens ' s t 4 Hogarth , " the ' Dunciad , " Freemasons ' Magazine , Sec . M . C .

Stability Lodge or Insteuotion . —The recent festival held was in celebration of its . forty-first anniversary—not twenty-first , as stated by our reporter . CxiNADA . —We have received a \ further correspondence between the Grand Secretary , Bro . Gray Clarke , and Bro . Harington , late Prov . G . M . for Quebec and the Three Rivers , which shall appear next week .

Lex . '—We are of opinion that the Lodge has no right to pass a by-law providing for regular Lodge nights , and Master Masons' Lodges ; the latter cannot be required regularly , excepting it be for instruction , as the only business that could be performed w ould be raisings , for which purpose it would be better and more regular to call a Lodge of emergency . The minutes of the regular Lodge could not be confirmed at such a meeting , nor at any meeting from which even the youngest member was excluded .

Bro . J . W . H . Tidswell writes to deny that Bro . Pocklington introduced the present system of working in the Hundred of Elloe Lodge , as stated at a recent meeting of the Lodge of Harmony . He also complains that Bro . Pocklington has taken credit to himself for a lecture formerly delivered by him ( Brof Ticjswell ) . The letter is , however , too personal for publication .

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