Skip to main content
Museum of Freemasonry

Masonic Periodicals Online

  • Explore
  • Advanced Search
  • Home
  • Explore
  • The Masonic Observer
  • March 1, 1857
  • Page 9
  • "ADDRESS TO THE CRAFT, BY A PAST MASTER."
Current:

The Masonic Observer, March 1, 1857: Page 9

  • Back to The Masonic Observer, March 1, 1857
  • Print image
  • Articles/Ads
    Article "ADDRESS TO THE CRAFT, BY A PAST MASTER." ← Page 2 of 3 →
Page 9

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

"Address To The Craft, By A Past Master."

to bark , " is a doctrine very convenient for the governing , but not quite so satisfactory for the governed body : and though the words of the Past-Master may be father to the thought and wish , yet we are not prepared to admit that the representatives of the English lodges , the strength and sinew of the Craft , are bound to maintain a reverential silence in the presence of brethren who

represent nothing but the G . M . ' s appointment , and an exclusive monopoly of official distinctions . HI . And this furnishes us with an answer to the third allegation that we have misrepresented the character and measures of the Dais . " Why find fault with the Dais ? " cries the Past-Master . "Are they not

members of all the various ranks of society ; men of office and respectability ; masons equally with every other member of G . L . ? " Granted in theory , but in stern practice how stands the case ? With a few honourable exceptions , or on occasions when the safety of our Executive is at stake , and the Secretary for the War

Department is summoned to rescue us from our Balaclavalike disorganisation , and in the words of the Past-Master , "to drill the country masons " ' —with these exceptions , the attendance on the Dais is confined to a very select circle . " But what difference is there between those who sit on the Dais and those in the body

of the Hall ? There , is this great difference ; that the members of the Dais toe their position to the favour of the G . M . alone , whilst those who constitute the bulk of G . L . are the deputed representatives of the London and the country Lodges . And this tie , which , under a

wiser executive than that which our present G . M . possesses , would have been felt only for useful purposes , has unfortunately been by them twisted and tangled into a gordian knot , which now defies all half-measures , and which needs the sword of an Alexander for its severance . " But how are the Dais guilty of maladministration , or how have they obstructed the progress of our fortunes ? "

Those who have power , and influence , and position , who have a right to speak , but remain silent in the presence of great wrongs , incur a very large share of the responsibility of that wrong . For four years Canada , through unparalleled neglect , was known to be verging towards rebellion or independance ; for four years the Dais were

silent ; for three years Masons in Malta , Trinidad , and Hong Kong , were known to be exposed to grievous persecutions at the hands of the Roman Catholic clergy ; for three years the Dais were silent ; but when at last that portentous silence was broken , the Dais declared that nothing could , or wouldor should be done to remed

, y Canadian grievances and foreign persecutions . And what of their policy at home ? They opposed the Mark degree , they objected to a colonial hoard , they obstructed the circulation of the business papers both for the London and the country Lodges , and having nullified a vote of G . L . in 1848 by which a pocket edition of the Book

, of Constitutions was published , they expressed—in the person of one of their number—a grave apprehension of the serious calamities which would arise when every member of G . L . should become acquainted with the Constitutions by which they are governed 1

IV . Into the question of Adjournment we will not enter . On the 11 th of February , the Grand Master placed that question on the footing of a personal censure ; and G . L ., declining such an issue , prepared to sacrifice its undoubted wish . But we will beg our readers to remember , that all which we ever claimed for the Craftwas a free discussion of the right of

, adjournment . We have uniformly admitted the possibility of arguments on both sides , though they have seemed to us to preponderate strongly in favour of our views ; but the essence of our objections to the conduct of the Dais on this subject lies in then- determination to smother all debate , to over-ride G . L ., and to confirm

the G . M . in a decision to reverse a judgment—which two acting G . M . s had pronounced , and two G . L . s had ratified—without talcing the sense of the Craft upon a matter of such high constitutional import . V . But we are accused of sanctioning an usurpation on the free agency of G . L ., by the members of a

particular Lodge , of whom the Constitutional party mainly consits . " We would not affect an ignorance of the Lodge which is here designated ; but we would ask how—in the presence . of colonial memorials , of petitions from every part of England—how—with the sound of loud cheers still seeming to ring in our ears in London ,

in Bath , in Wales , in Shropshire , as each maxim of constitutional policy found expression—how is it possible to believe that memorials , petitions , cheers are more phantoms and unrealities , and that the great party who have rarely tried a division in G . L . without success ,

are but the members of a recently revived Lodge ? Had this even been so , then the late movement would have been a narrow and a sectional one , and naturally and deservedly would have come to nought : but the Past Master , we think , may calm his apprehensions , when he finds , acting and speaking in defence of constitutional principlesmen such as Bros . BINCICESSYMONDS ,

, , MASON , GREGORY , STUBBING-, HEARN , WARREN , WELLS , HAKWOOD , Sir E . LECHMEBE , & C- —men who have no connexion with that Lodge , which seems to haunt I lis waking and sleeping thoughts ; but whose knowledge of Masonry , whose zeal for the Craft , and whose position of high respect among their London and provincial

brethren are unquestionable . Are these the men who " have destroyed our harmony "—the harmony of paralysis !—who " have attempted to divert Masonry to the purposes of a party , " who have lent themselves to " misstatements , " to "faction , " and to " a spirit antagonistic to Masonry ? "

VI . The last allegation is so melodramatic and akin to the ludicrous , that we have some semble to weary our readers by replying to it . We are accused of a dark and deep laid conspiracy . It is a question of gunpowder and luerfer matches , and the last scene in the " Huguenots "—what can it he ? " Is it envy ? is it ambition ?

or is it directed against the very fabric of Masonry itself ? " Oh ! it is something far darker and deeper than this . Neither Guy Fawkes , nor Charles IX ., nor the Sultan Mahmoud , ever meditated a blacker ( and we must add a more circuitous ) treason . There is treuchery

“The Masonic Observer: 1857-03-01, Page 9” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 25 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mob/issues/mob_01031857/page/9/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
Untitled Article 1
Untitled Article 2
Untitled Article 3
Untitled Article 3
Untitled Article 4
GRAND LODGE OF EMERGENCY. Article 4
"ADDRESS TO THE CRAFT, BY A PAST MASTER." Article 8
Untitled Article 10
Untitled Article 10
MEMORIAL FROM THE PROVINCIAL GRAND LODGE OF CANADA WEST. Article 10
BRO. THE EARL OF CARNARVON AT BATH. Article 12
A VALENTINE SOMEWHAT OVERDUE. Article 13
"THE MASONIC OBSERVER" TO HIS SHAMELESS LITTLE MUSE. Article 13
Untitled Article 14
Correspondence. Article 14
Untitled Article 15
From the " Canadian Masonic Pioneer." Article 16
Untitled Article 16
Untitled Article 16
"THE EARLY WITHDRAWAL OF THE BENEVOLENT—A LESSON TO SURVIVORS." Article 16
Untitled Article 16
Untitled Article 16
Untitled Article 16
Page 1

Page 1

2 Articles
Page 2

Page 2

2 Articles
Page 3

Page 3

3 Articles
Page 4

Page 4

2 Articles
Page 5

Page 5

1 Article
Page 6

Page 6

1 Article
Page 7

Page 7

1 Article
Page 8

Page 8

1 Article
Page 9

Page 9

1 Article
Page 10

Page 10

4 Articles
Page 11

Page 11

1 Article
Page 12

Page 12

2 Articles
Page 13

Page 13

3 Articles
Page 14

Page 14

3 Articles
Page 15

Page 15

2 Articles
Page 16

Page 16

7 Articles
Page 9

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

"Address To The Craft, By A Past Master."

to bark , " is a doctrine very convenient for the governing , but not quite so satisfactory for the governed body : and though the words of the Past-Master may be father to the thought and wish , yet we are not prepared to admit that the representatives of the English lodges , the strength and sinew of the Craft , are bound to maintain a reverential silence in the presence of brethren who

represent nothing but the G . M . ' s appointment , and an exclusive monopoly of official distinctions . HI . And this furnishes us with an answer to the third allegation that we have misrepresented the character and measures of the Dais . " Why find fault with the Dais ? " cries the Past-Master . "Are they not

members of all the various ranks of society ; men of office and respectability ; masons equally with every other member of G . L . ? " Granted in theory , but in stern practice how stands the case ? With a few honourable exceptions , or on occasions when the safety of our Executive is at stake , and the Secretary for the War

Department is summoned to rescue us from our Balaclavalike disorganisation , and in the words of the Past-Master , "to drill the country masons " ' —with these exceptions , the attendance on the Dais is confined to a very select circle . " But what difference is there between those who sit on the Dais and those in the body

of the Hall ? There , is this great difference ; that the members of the Dais toe their position to the favour of the G . M . alone , whilst those who constitute the bulk of G . L . are the deputed representatives of the London and the country Lodges . And this tie , which , under a

wiser executive than that which our present G . M . possesses , would have been felt only for useful purposes , has unfortunately been by them twisted and tangled into a gordian knot , which now defies all half-measures , and which needs the sword of an Alexander for its severance . " But how are the Dais guilty of maladministration , or how have they obstructed the progress of our fortunes ? "

Those who have power , and influence , and position , who have a right to speak , but remain silent in the presence of great wrongs , incur a very large share of the responsibility of that wrong . For four years Canada , through unparalleled neglect , was known to be verging towards rebellion or independance ; for four years the Dais were

silent ; for three years Masons in Malta , Trinidad , and Hong Kong , were known to be exposed to grievous persecutions at the hands of the Roman Catholic clergy ; for three years the Dais were silent ; but when at last that portentous silence was broken , the Dais declared that nothing could , or wouldor should be done to remed

, y Canadian grievances and foreign persecutions . And what of their policy at home ? They opposed the Mark degree , they objected to a colonial hoard , they obstructed the circulation of the business papers both for the London and the country Lodges , and having nullified a vote of G . L . in 1848 by which a pocket edition of the Book

, of Constitutions was published , they expressed—in the person of one of their number—a grave apprehension of the serious calamities which would arise when every member of G . L . should become acquainted with the Constitutions by which they are governed 1

IV . Into the question of Adjournment we will not enter . On the 11 th of February , the Grand Master placed that question on the footing of a personal censure ; and G . L ., declining such an issue , prepared to sacrifice its undoubted wish . But we will beg our readers to remember , that all which we ever claimed for the Craftwas a free discussion of the right of

, adjournment . We have uniformly admitted the possibility of arguments on both sides , though they have seemed to us to preponderate strongly in favour of our views ; but the essence of our objections to the conduct of the Dais on this subject lies in then- determination to smother all debate , to over-ride G . L ., and to confirm

the G . M . in a decision to reverse a judgment—which two acting G . M . s had pronounced , and two G . L . s had ratified—without talcing the sense of the Craft upon a matter of such high constitutional import . V . But we are accused of sanctioning an usurpation on the free agency of G . L ., by the members of a

particular Lodge , of whom the Constitutional party mainly consits . " We would not affect an ignorance of the Lodge which is here designated ; but we would ask how—in the presence . of colonial memorials , of petitions from every part of England—how—with the sound of loud cheers still seeming to ring in our ears in London ,

in Bath , in Wales , in Shropshire , as each maxim of constitutional policy found expression—how is it possible to believe that memorials , petitions , cheers are more phantoms and unrealities , and that the great party who have rarely tried a division in G . L . without success ,

are but the members of a recently revived Lodge ? Had this even been so , then the late movement would have been a narrow and a sectional one , and naturally and deservedly would have come to nought : but the Past Master , we think , may calm his apprehensions , when he finds , acting and speaking in defence of constitutional principlesmen such as Bros . BINCICESSYMONDS ,

, , MASON , GREGORY , STUBBING-, HEARN , WARREN , WELLS , HAKWOOD , Sir E . LECHMEBE , & C- —men who have no connexion with that Lodge , which seems to haunt I lis waking and sleeping thoughts ; but whose knowledge of Masonry , whose zeal for the Craft , and whose position of high respect among their London and provincial

brethren are unquestionable . Are these the men who " have destroyed our harmony "—the harmony of paralysis !—who " have attempted to divert Masonry to the purposes of a party , " who have lent themselves to " misstatements , " to "faction , " and to " a spirit antagonistic to Masonry ? "

VI . The last allegation is so melodramatic and akin to the ludicrous , that we have some semble to weary our readers by replying to it . We are accused of a dark and deep laid conspiracy . It is a question of gunpowder and luerfer matches , and the last scene in the " Huguenots "—what can it he ? " Is it envy ? is it ambition ?

or is it directed against the very fabric of Masonry itself ? " Oh ! it is something far darker and deeper than this . Neither Guy Fawkes , nor Charles IX ., nor the Sultan Mahmoud , ever meditated a blacker ( and we must add a more circuitous ) treason . There is treuchery

  • Prev page
  • 1
  • 8
  • You're on page9
  • 10
  • 16
  • Next page
  • Accredited Museum Designated Outstanding Collection
  • LIBRARY AND MUSEUM CHARITABLE TRUST OF THE UNITED GRAND LODGE OF ENGLAND REGISTERED CHARITY NUMBER 1058497 / ALL RIGHTS RESERVED © 2025

  • Accessibility statement

  • Designed, developed, and maintained by King's Digital Lab

We use cookies to track usage and preferences.

Privacy & cookie policy