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  • Sept. 1, 1890
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The Masonic Review, Sept. 1, 1890: Page 1

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    Article Round and About. Page 1 of 11 →
Page 1

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

Round And About.

Round and About .

ckY ^ Here we get the MASONIC Rimtw in a new garb , with a very beautiful portrait in place of the mechanical process block hitherto presented . The work has been reduced in size , but increased in volume , to admit of greater facilities

in binding , and the journal comes one step nearer the perfection of my first conception . For the first time I print forms of application for subscribers , which I hope will be very largely used , but it must be understood that prepayment is absolutely necessary . Whether the M ASONIC REVIEW

is obtained direct from the publishing office or through a bookseller matters but very little to myself , but subscribers may care to know that by ordering through a bookseller they receive the mounted photograph unrolled , and therefore in a better state for framing .

# * Among the more immediate subjects in the Masonic Portrait Gallery are : — Mr . Henry Irving . Lord Brooke .

Mr . Faithfull Begg . Lord Londesborough . Sir Archibald Campbell , Bart . Mr . Robert Grey . Mr . Edmund Yates .

Mr . Charles Barry . Marquis of Hartington . Chief Justice Way . « * *

Lord Dungarvan must be a lucky man to fall into the Provincial shoes of the late Earl of Carnarvon , for although he is a sound and enthusiastic Mason , being the son of his father must answer , I should think , for his appointment .

The late Earl was one of those men who had a kindly word for most people , and when I called upon him the very day his last illness began , he was good enough to express himself most pleasingly about this journal , and invited me to visit him at Highclere when the family went back there in the autumn . As he came to his sittingroom door , on the first floor of his house in

Portmansquare , the hand-shake he gave me proved to be his parting with the Craft of Masonry he had served so brilliantly and well , for on the following day he was confined to his room , never to leave it alive . I have before and elsewhere commented upon the death of one of the most

brilliant Pro-Grand Masters English Freemasonry has ever had ; but in fulfilment of his permission , the present Lord Carnarvon has offered me every facility for preparing a lengthened monograph upon the life of his father , which I purpose illustrating and running as a serial as soon as circumstances will permit .

From the Telegraph , to be read daily by all parvenues who hanker after a seat : — " Sir James Hannen proposed ' The Houses of Lords and Commons , ' remarking , as to the latter Assembly , that he tried to become a member thirty years ago , and had never ceased to rejoice that he

failed . " # * -A < Bro . R . Clay Ludlow , G . St . B ., Sic , & c , has been dining with friends in the Craft , who , backed up principally by the members of the Emulation Lodge of

Improvement , have been showing their admiration for him and his work by presenting him with a really very beautiful album , containing an address and nearly 200 signatures , and the full dress clothing of Grand Standard Bearer and two sets of undress clothing ; the jewel of his Grand Office ,

a complete set of jewels ^ in miniature , and the jewels of D . G . D . of C . of Grand Chapter . The jewels are of gold , and form a worthy gift to a very worthy man .

» * » The presentation was made by Thomas Fenn . That seems the most natural way of writing of a Brother who is so well known and respected that the prefix of Bro . or of Mr . becomes superfluous . Thomas Fenn is the senior

partner in the firm of Fenn & Crosswait , stockbrokers , of Princes Street , City , and is one of the soundest Masons living . He is brave enough to admit' he has very little admiration for the purposes of Masonic journalism , though perhaps he has never very religiously considered what those

purposes are , but , as a subject of the Masonic Portrait Gallery , he may some time in the near future be able to tell us .

“The Masonic Review: 1890-09-01, Page 1” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 3 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/msr/issues/msr_01091890/page/1/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
Round and About. Article 1
Untitled Article 10
Untitled Article 12
Eminent Masons at Home. Article 12
Untitled Article 13
THE SESSION. Article 15
THE HISTORY OF FREEMASONRY. Article 16
Gathered Chips. Article 17
Sawdust. Article 18
ANSWERS TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 22
Untitled Ad 22
Untitled Ad 23
Untitled Ad 23
Untitled Ad 23
Untitled Ad 23
Untitled Ad 23
Untitled Ad 23
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Round And About.

Round and About .

ckY ^ Here we get the MASONIC Rimtw in a new garb , with a very beautiful portrait in place of the mechanical process block hitherto presented . The work has been reduced in size , but increased in volume , to admit of greater facilities

in binding , and the journal comes one step nearer the perfection of my first conception . For the first time I print forms of application for subscribers , which I hope will be very largely used , but it must be understood that prepayment is absolutely necessary . Whether the M ASONIC REVIEW

is obtained direct from the publishing office or through a bookseller matters but very little to myself , but subscribers may care to know that by ordering through a bookseller they receive the mounted photograph unrolled , and therefore in a better state for framing .

# * Among the more immediate subjects in the Masonic Portrait Gallery are : — Mr . Henry Irving . Lord Brooke .

Mr . Faithfull Begg . Lord Londesborough . Sir Archibald Campbell , Bart . Mr . Robert Grey . Mr . Edmund Yates .

Mr . Charles Barry . Marquis of Hartington . Chief Justice Way . « * *

Lord Dungarvan must be a lucky man to fall into the Provincial shoes of the late Earl of Carnarvon , for although he is a sound and enthusiastic Mason , being the son of his father must answer , I should think , for his appointment .

The late Earl was one of those men who had a kindly word for most people , and when I called upon him the very day his last illness began , he was good enough to express himself most pleasingly about this journal , and invited me to visit him at Highclere when the family went back there in the autumn . As he came to his sittingroom door , on the first floor of his house in

Portmansquare , the hand-shake he gave me proved to be his parting with the Craft of Masonry he had served so brilliantly and well , for on the following day he was confined to his room , never to leave it alive . I have before and elsewhere commented upon the death of one of the most

brilliant Pro-Grand Masters English Freemasonry has ever had ; but in fulfilment of his permission , the present Lord Carnarvon has offered me every facility for preparing a lengthened monograph upon the life of his father , which I purpose illustrating and running as a serial as soon as circumstances will permit .

From the Telegraph , to be read daily by all parvenues who hanker after a seat : — " Sir James Hannen proposed ' The Houses of Lords and Commons , ' remarking , as to the latter Assembly , that he tried to become a member thirty years ago , and had never ceased to rejoice that he

failed . " # * -A < Bro . R . Clay Ludlow , G . St . B ., Sic , & c , has been dining with friends in the Craft , who , backed up principally by the members of the Emulation Lodge of

Improvement , have been showing their admiration for him and his work by presenting him with a really very beautiful album , containing an address and nearly 200 signatures , and the full dress clothing of Grand Standard Bearer and two sets of undress clothing ; the jewel of his Grand Office ,

a complete set of jewels ^ in miniature , and the jewels of D . G . D . of C . of Grand Chapter . The jewels are of gold , and form a worthy gift to a very worthy man .

» * » The presentation was made by Thomas Fenn . That seems the most natural way of writing of a Brother who is so well known and respected that the prefix of Bro . or of Mr . becomes superfluous . Thomas Fenn is the senior

partner in the firm of Fenn & Crosswait , stockbrokers , of Princes Street , City , and is one of the soundest Masons living . He is brave enough to admit' he has very little admiration for the purposes of Masonic journalism , though perhaps he has never very religiously considered what those

purposes are , but , as a subject of the Masonic Portrait Gallery , he may some time in the near future be able to tell us .

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