Skip to main content
Museum of Freemasonry

Masonic Periodicals Online

  • Explore
  • Advanced Search
  • Home
  • Explore
  • The Freemason's Chronicle
  • Jan. 1, 1876
  • Page 10
Current:

The Freemason's Chronicle, Jan. 1, 1876: Page 10

  • Back to The Freemason's Chronicle, Jan. 1, 1876
  • Print image
  • Articles/Ads
    Article REVIEWS. Page 1 of 1
    Article REVIEWS. Page 1 of 1
Page 10

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

Reviews.

REVIEWS .

All Books intended for Heview should be addressed to the Editor of The Freemason ' s Chronicle , 67 Barbican , E . C . Waifs and Strays , Chiefly from the Chess-Board . By CAPTAIN Huon

A . KENNEDY , Vice-President of the British Chess Association ; late President of the Brighton , Bath , and Bristol Athentoum Chess Clubs . Second Edition , Enlarged . London : W . W . Morgan , 67 Barbican . 187 G .

CHESS Books , as a rule , aro restricted to a sotnowhat narrow circle of readers , but this work of Captain Kennedy ' s is one which , wo imagine , will be most universally popular . It is charmingly written ; the style easy , graceful , chatty ; the matter excellent . There is a largo fund of anecdote scattered throughout its pages , while the hints , if sometimes cynical , show at all events good sound practical common

sense . The work has appeared previously , this being , as tho title shows , a second edition . But there is a considerable amount of new matter , including the papers on " Buckle as a Chess Player , " " Buckle ' s Chess Keferences , " and " Albany de Fonblanque as a Chess Player , " which originally appeared in tho Westminster Papers , and are now published by permission of Mr . Mossop , together with " My

Match at Chess with Horr Springbok , " reprinted from tho American Chess Monthly . The four concluding articles appeared some years since , and have been added , as the author tells us , in order to relievo "The monotony of a naturally dry subject , " a reason which , with all duo respect to Captain Kennedy , hardly holds good , seeing how lively a tone he has adopted throughout the preceding portion of his

work , so that even tho veriest ignoramus in Chess may read , markj learn , and enjoy the Waifs and Strays described herein . However , it matters little what reason is assigned . Here have we the articles , and right glad are we they arc inserted . But to pass to tho contents . The first portion of the book is devoted to " Some Eeminiscences in the life of Augustus Fitzsnob

Esq . " These are various , extend over no inconsiderablo period of time , and are highly amusing . Several people figure in these chapters whose names aro familiar enough to our readers . Thus we have a sketch of the first Napoleon in exile , playing Chess with General Bertrand . Then there is a neat story how Theodore Hook shut up a Mr . Mnlligrub who was eternally spinning yarns . The habitue ' s at

the Divan must be well enough known to those who havo ever interested themselves in the doings of tho Chess World . One anecdote of a certain M . Pion Cofle deserves quotation . In expressing his opinion of a certain member of the Buy Lopez Chess Club , for whom he had conceived a liking , tho jovial Frenchman remarked "He is a very

nice gentleman , Mistare Smeeth , I am so fond of heem ; but ( with a melancholy shake of the head ) I fear ho is bloody fool !"—moaning that Mr . Smith was constitutionally sanguineous , or full of blood . Nor is the anecdote which was told by a Dr . Macwhirter one we feel justified in passing unnoticed . It reads as follows : —

" In the town of Aberdeen there practised a certain writer or attorney , whose roguish practices had acquired for him the unenviable sobriquet of'scoundrel Grant . ' In the same place thore also resided an outspoken old gentleman , Mochrio by name , who was possessed with a mortal antipathy to tho aforesaid Grant . This senior , being a guest at a large dinner party , after the now happily exploded fashion

of the time , was , in his turn , called on to propose a toast when the cloth had been removed . 'Well , gentlemen , ' said the old boy , 'I'll give ye a tost ; hero ' s 'high hanging to scoondrel Grant , ' which was solemnly drunk by the assembled convives . A day or so afterwards Messrs . Mochrie and Grant met iu the street , the latter having been previously made aware , by some kind friend , of the compliment that

had been paid to him at the dinner . Angrily accosting Mr . Mochrie , he said , ' Is it true , sir , that you gave as a toast the other evening , ' high hanging to scoundrel Grant ? ' ' Yes , ' replied the other , ' ye have been rightly informed ; I did give that tost . ' ' Then , sir , ' said Grant in a fury , ' I suppose yon aro prepared to take the

consequences of such a proceeding ? ' ' God bless my heart ! sir , ' answered Mochrie , cocking his eye at the interlocutor with an air of surprise , ' aro ye scoondrel Grant ? ' ' No ! ' roared Grant , * I am not . ' ' Then , ' qnoth tho veteran , deliberately helping himself to a pinch of snuff , ' if ye ' re not scoondrel Grant , I should like to know what ye havo got to do with my tost ?'"

Then follows an account of tho match with Herr Springbok , capitally told , then " A Cursory Chat on Chess , " and then " Chess Chips , " in three parts . These are also freely interspersed with anecdotes , all of which are more or less amusing . Thus of the absorbing power of Chess over the minds of some players , we have the following ludicrous story : —¦

" It happened that two individuals wero intently engaged over a game , one of whom had been prodigally gifted by nature with a nose of uncommon length and proportions . In the anxious examination of a difficult position in tho partic , of which ho had decidedly the worst , this gentleman , in no very placid mood , had thrust tho upper part of his person forward , until his head , and especially his nasal

organ , appeared to predominate over the major part of the board . While in this posture , his opponent remarked with dismay that , evidently unnoticed by its preoccupied owner , there was agglomerated at the end of tho prominent feature aforesaid , a huge pendicle or drop , which , without spoedy abstertiou , threatened to deposit itself amongst tho pieces . He accordingly politely hinted this untoward

state ot matters to his absorbed and testy antagonist . The intimation , however , meeting with no attention , and the case being urgent , he somewhat peremptorily recommended him to blow his nose . ' Blow it yourself , ' at length growled the exasperated proprietor of the Slawkenbergian appendage ; ' I'm sure it ' s nearer you than it is to me !'"

Reviews.

Of the irascibility of some players , several instances are recorded . Lord Stair is cited as not scrupling , occasionally , " to have recourse to the voie du fait , and project a snuffer-tray , or the first thing that comes to his hand . " Carte , tho historian , is also quoted as mentioning that our Henry I ., before he was King , once played a game with

Lonis Le Gros , son of Philip of France . The latter was so exasperated at losing several games , and a good deal of money , that he flung the Chessmen at Henry ' s head , tho latter retaliating with so vigorous an attack on Philip with the board , that , but for timely interference , he would have killed him outright . One instance of this extreme irascibility we quote at length : —

" Many years ago my informant was playing chess with an intimate friend , an old clergyman , who was a deep enthusiast of the game . The chessmen they used were a beautiful new Chinese set , of delicately-carved ivory , which the clergyman had just received as a present from abroad . The contost , which was a long one , had gone against my friend from the beginning , and he was just on the point

of striking his flag , when an unlooked-for oversight , ou the part of his adversary , enabled him to give a peremptory mate . The loser , without uttering a word , precipitately rose from the table , swept all the pieces violently on the floor , and frantically trod them under foot . The poor old gentleman then , after gazing vacantly for a little while on the ruin he had made , sat down in a chair , and wept like a child . "

Similarly , the chapter headed , " A Desultory Ramble with the Chess Men , " contains a number of amusing anecdotes—the one quoted from Sam Slick , of tho Midshipman , at page 143 , though short , being especially so . Then follow the chapters on Buckle nnd de Fonblanque ,

which we referred to at tho beginning , as having originally appeared in the Westminster Papers , aud theu " A Fasciculus of Chess Wrinkles , " tho nature of which may be judged fromjfche three following , selected haphazard * . —

" Although you may esteem it perfectly legitimate and proper for yourself , when a loser , to lament that you are ' playing badly , ' should your opponent attempt the same plea in similar circumstances , reply promptly that you cannot allow him so to disparage his own skill ; that ho has played exceedingly well , but that you have played better . "

" In the moment of victory , fail not , I beseech you , to make your foiled ' opposite' quaff largely of the bitter cup of defeat . This you will do , not for your own gratification , but rather because you ought to consider it a paramount and conscientious duty , to endeavour at all times to impress upon your fellow-man the truthful moral that

' sweet are the uses of adversity . ' Fall back in your chair , then , and regard your vanquished adversary with an easy air of laughing triumph , talking while you do so as if it were a matter of course that you should have beaten him . After this , ' quenching your familiar smile with an austere regard of control , ' proceed to point out , as

lengthily as you can , that his opening was bad , his method of attack altogether unsound , and that , after a certain move , the ruinous consequences of which yon are astonished he did not foresee , his game was irretrievable . Conclude by hinting that perhaps you could afford to render him some odds . Should he wince at all under this

wholesome discipline , and attempt a blustering reply , hear him in silence , letting your countenance simply assume a Pecksniffian smile of commiserating pity—it becomes you to make every compatible allowance for tho mortified feelings of a beaten enemy , reflecting , as you must do , that you yourself cannot always expect to win . "

" Shonld it strike yon that the constitution of your game is in a shaky state , aud likely soon to broak up , abruptly draw out your watch , and declare , with an appearance of much vexation , that you havo a pressing engagement at a certain hour , and that you must

incontinently go , as your time is up . Your antagonist may probably hint that your game is up , as well as your time , in which case indignantly assert ( without particularising on which side ) , that you distinctly see checkmate in a few moves , and then , staying no longer question , make yourself scarce .

Our regret is , that Captain Kennedy has not found room for more of these amusing " wrinkles . " Then comes a brief " Scene in Kies ' s Divan , " and then the papers reprinted from Punc / i . Having thus indicated at some length the character of this work , and having expressed our opinion on the very great merits it

undoubtedly exhibits , we take leave of theso Waifs and Strays , with the single remark that if any of our readers , Chess-players or not , are in want of some pleasant book to pass an odd honr or two , they will do well to read this one of Captain Kennedy ' s . If they cannot extract amusement from it they must be dull indeed .

TENNYSON ' S " IN MEMOIUAM . " —Twice in the course of the present century a great man has made the memory of a comparatively unknown friend gracious , loveable , and lasting . These tributes to dead friendship arc very beautiful . Milton elegises his Lycidas—otherwise long since forgotten . Sholley beautifies oven the beautiful memory of Adonais . Carlyle translates John Sterling from oblivion , and sets

him down m rest with the world ' s immortals . In like manner , bnt in a completer fashion than thorn all , Tennyson has perpetuated the memory of hi 3 friend , Arthur Henry Hallam . It is , for once , a fine and eqnitable adjustment of fate , that the mourner has raised his own best monumont whilst he did but endeavour to bnild that of a dead friend . Tho self-erected memorial of Ozymandias crumbles and

leaves nothing but a fragment and a name ; but the lament of David over Jonathan lives through all these centuries . Sorrow was never so lovely as in tho pages of " In Memoriam . " Any analysis , criticism , or description of the work would be here impossible . It stands alono in literature . There are greater poems in tho world , no doubt , but there is none like it . It is , by itself , a species . — -From Casaell ' s National Portrait Gallery for January .

“The Freemason's Chronicle: 1876-01-01, Page 10” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 14 July 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fcn/issues/fcn_01011876/page/10/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
Untitled Article 2
INDEX. Article 3
INDEX. Article 4
THE 1ST JANUARY 1876. Article 5
SOME OBJECTIONS TO MASONRY CONSIDERED. Article 5
MASONIC PORTRAITS (No. 9.) THE KNIGHT ERRANT. Article 6
EAST, WEST AND SOUTH. Article 7
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 9
PROVISION FOR MASONIC ORPHANS OF THE JEWISH FAITH. Article 9
MASONIC JURISPRUDENCE. Article 9
ANSWERS TO CORRESPONDENTS Article 9
REVIEWS. Article 10
THE DRAMA. Article 11
HONORARY MEMBERSHIP. Article 11
Untitled Ad 11
Untitled Ad 11
Untitled Ad 12
Untitled Ad 12
Untitled Ad 12
Untitled Ad 12
Untitled Article 12
OUR WEEKLY BUDGET. Article 12
ARE YOU A MASON? Article 14
DIARY FOR THE WEEK. Article 15
GLASGOW DISTRICT. Article 15
NOTICES OF MEETINGS. Article 15
HUMBER LODGE OF FREEMASONS, HULL. Article 17
Untitled Ad 19
Untitled Ad 19
Untitled Ad 19
Untitled Ad 19
Untitled Ad 19
Untitled Ad 19
Untitled Ad 19
Untitled Ad 19
Untitled Ad 19
Untitled Ad 19
Untitled Ad 19
Untitled Ad 19
Untitled Ad 19
Untitled Ad 19
Untitled Ad 19
Untitled Ad 20
Untitled Ad 20
Untitled Ad 20
Untitled Ad 20
Untitled Ad 20
Untitled Ad 20
Untitled Ad 20
Untitled Ad 20
Untitled Ad 20
Untitled Ad 20
Untitled Ad 20
Untitled Ad 20
Untitled Ad 20
Untitled Ad 20
Untitled Ad 20
Untitled Ad 20
Untitled Ad 20
Page 1

Page 1

1 Article
Page 2

Page 2

1 Article
Page 3

Page 3

2 Articles
Page 4

Page 4

1 Article
Page 5

Page 5

4 Articles
Page 6

Page 6

3 Articles
Page 7

Page 7

3 Articles
Page 8

Page 8

2 Articles
Page 9

Page 9

6 Articles
Page 10

Page 10

2 Articles
Page 11

Page 11

4 Articles
Page 12

Page 12

6 Articles
Page 13

Page 13

2 Articles
Page 14

Page 14

2 Articles
Page 15

Page 15

3 Articles
Page 16

Page 16

1 Article
Page 17

Page 17

3 Articles
Page 18

Page 18

2 Articles
Page 19

Page 19

15 Articles
Page 20

Page 20

17 Articles
Page 10

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

Reviews.

REVIEWS .

All Books intended for Heview should be addressed to the Editor of The Freemason ' s Chronicle , 67 Barbican , E . C . Waifs and Strays , Chiefly from the Chess-Board . By CAPTAIN Huon

A . KENNEDY , Vice-President of the British Chess Association ; late President of the Brighton , Bath , and Bristol Athentoum Chess Clubs . Second Edition , Enlarged . London : W . W . Morgan , 67 Barbican . 187 G .

CHESS Books , as a rule , aro restricted to a sotnowhat narrow circle of readers , but this work of Captain Kennedy ' s is one which , wo imagine , will be most universally popular . It is charmingly written ; the style easy , graceful , chatty ; the matter excellent . There is a largo fund of anecdote scattered throughout its pages , while the hints , if sometimes cynical , show at all events good sound practical common

sense . The work has appeared previously , this being , as tho title shows , a second edition . But there is a considerable amount of new matter , including the papers on " Buckle as a Chess Player , " " Buckle ' s Chess Keferences , " and " Albany de Fonblanque as a Chess Player , " which originally appeared in tho Westminster Papers , and are now published by permission of Mr . Mossop , together with " My

Match at Chess with Horr Springbok , " reprinted from tho American Chess Monthly . The four concluding articles appeared some years since , and have been added , as the author tells us , in order to relievo "The monotony of a naturally dry subject , " a reason which , with all duo respect to Captain Kennedy , hardly holds good , seeing how lively a tone he has adopted throughout the preceding portion of his

work , so that even tho veriest ignoramus in Chess may read , markj learn , and enjoy the Waifs and Strays described herein . However , it matters little what reason is assigned . Here have we the articles , and right glad are we they arc inserted . But to pass to tho contents . The first portion of the book is devoted to " Some Eeminiscences in the life of Augustus Fitzsnob

Esq . " These are various , extend over no inconsiderablo period of time , and are highly amusing . Several people figure in these chapters whose names aro familiar enough to our readers . Thus we have a sketch of the first Napoleon in exile , playing Chess with General Bertrand . Then there is a neat story how Theodore Hook shut up a Mr . Mnlligrub who was eternally spinning yarns . The habitue ' s at

the Divan must be well enough known to those who havo ever interested themselves in the doings of tho Chess World . One anecdote of a certain M . Pion Cofle deserves quotation . In expressing his opinion of a certain member of the Buy Lopez Chess Club , for whom he had conceived a liking , tho jovial Frenchman remarked "He is a very

nice gentleman , Mistare Smeeth , I am so fond of heem ; but ( with a melancholy shake of the head ) I fear ho is bloody fool !"—moaning that Mr . Smith was constitutionally sanguineous , or full of blood . Nor is the anecdote which was told by a Dr . Macwhirter one we feel justified in passing unnoticed . It reads as follows : —

" In the town of Aberdeen there practised a certain writer or attorney , whose roguish practices had acquired for him the unenviable sobriquet of'scoundrel Grant . ' In the same place thore also resided an outspoken old gentleman , Mochrio by name , who was possessed with a mortal antipathy to tho aforesaid Grant . This senior , being a guest at a large dinner party , after the now happily exploded fashion

of the time , was , in his turn , called on to propose a toast when the cloth had been removed . 'Well , gentlemen , ' said the old boy , 'I'll give ye a tost ; hero ' s 'high hanging to scoondrel Grant , ' which was solemnly drunk by the assembled convives . A day or so afterwards Messrs . Mochrie and Grant met iu the street , the latter having been previously made aware , by some kind friend , of the compliment that

had been paid to him at the dinner . Angrily accosting Mr . Mochrie , he said , ' Is it true , sir , that you gave as a toast the other evening , ' high hanging to scoundrel Grant ? ' ' Yes , ' replied the other , ' ye have been rightly informed ; I did give that tost . ' ' Then , sir , ' said Grant in a fury , ' I suppose yon aro prepared to take the

consequences of such a proceeding ? ' ' God bless my heart ! sir , ' answered Mochrie , cocking his eye at the interlocutor with an air of surprise , ' aro ye scoondrel Grant ? ' ' No ! ' roared Grant , * I am not . ' ' Then , ' qnoth tho veteran , deliberately helping himself to a pinch of snuff , ' if ye ' re not scoondrel Grant , I should like to know what ye havo got to do with my tost ?'"

Then follows an account of tho match with Herr Springbok , capitally told , then " A Cursory Chat on Chess , " and then " Chess Chips , " in three parts . These are also freely interspersed with anecdotes , all of which are more or less amusing . Thus of the absorbing power of Chess over the minds of some players , we have the following ludicrous story : —¦

" It happened that two individuals wero intently engaged over a game , one of whom had been prodigally gifted by nature with a nose of uncommon length and proportions . In the anxious examination of a difficult position in tho partic , of which ho had decidedly the worst , this gentleman , in no very placid mood , had thrust tho upper part of his person forward , until his head , and especially his nasal

organ , appeared to predominate over the major part of the board . While in this posture , his opponent remarked with dismay that , evidently unnoticed by its preoccupied owner , there was agglomerated at the end of tho prominent feature aforesaid , a huge pendicle or drop , which , without spoedy abstertiou , threatened to deposit itself amongst tho pieces . He accordingly politely hinted this untoward

state ot matters to his absorbed and testy antagonist . The intimation , however , meeting with no attention , and the case being urgent , he somewhat peremptorily recommended him to blow his nose . ' Blow it yourself , ' at length growled the exasperated proprietor of the Slawkenbergian appendage ; ' I'm sure it ' s nearer you than it is to me !'"

Reviews.

Of the irascibility of some players , several instances are recorded . Lord Stair is cited as not scrupling , occasionally , " to have recourse to the voie du fait , and project a snuffer-tray , or the first thing that comes to his hand . " Carte , tho historian , is also quoted as mentioning that our Henry I ., before he was King , once played a game with

Lonis Le Gros , son of Philip of France . The latter was so exasperated at losing several games , and a good deal of money , that he flung the Chessmen at Henry ' s head , tho latter retaliating with so vigorous an attack on Philip with the board , that , but for timely interference , he would have killed him outright . One instance of this extreme irascibility we quote at length : —

" Many years ago my informant was playing chess with an intimate friend , an old clergyman , who was a deep enthusiast of the game . The chessmen they used were a beautiful new Chinese set , of delicately-carved ivory , which the clergyman had just received as a present from abroad . The contost , which was a long one , had gone against my friend from the beginning , and he was just on the point

of striking his flag , when an unlooked-for oversight , ou the part of his adversary , enabled him to give a peremptory mate . The loser , without uttering a word , precipitately rose from the table , swept all the pieces violently on the floor , and frantically trod them under foot . The poor old gentleman then , after gazing vacantly for a little while on the ruin he had made , sat down in a chair , and wept like a child . "

Similarly , the chapter headed , " A Desultory Ramble with the Chess Men , " contains a number of amusing anecdotes—the one quoted from Sam Slick , of tho Midshipman , at page 143 , though short , being especially so . Then follow the chapters on Buckle nnd de Fonblanque ,

which we referred to at tho beginning , as having originally appeared in the Westminster Papers , aud theu " A Fasciculus of Chess Wrinkles , " tho nature of which may be judged fromjfche three following , selected haphazard * . —

" Although you may esteem it perfectly legitimate and proper for yourself , when a loser , to lament that you are ' playing badly , ' should your opponent attempt the same plea in similar circumstances , reply promptly that you cannot allow him so to disparage his own skill ; that ho has played exceedingly well , but that you have played better . "

" In the moment of victory , fail not , I beseech you , to make your foiled ' opposite' quaff largely of the bitter cup of defeat . This you will do , not for your own gratification , but rather because you ought to consider it a paramount and conscientious duty , to endeavour at all times to impress upon your fellow-man the truthful moral that

' sweet are the uses of adversity . ' Fall back in your chair , then , and regard your vanquished adversary with an easy air of laughing triumph , talking while you do so as if it were a matter of course that you should have beaten him . After this , ' quenching your familiar smile with an austere regard of control , ' proceed to point out , as

lengthily as you can , that his opening was bad , his method of attack altogether unsound , and that , after a certain move , the ruinous consequences of which yon are astonished he did not foresee , his game was irretrievable . Conclude by hinting that perhaps you could afford to render him some odds . Should he wince at all under this

wholesome discipline , and attempt a blustering reply , hear him in silence , letting your countenance simply assume a Pecksniffian smile of commiserating pity—it becomes you to make every compatible allowance for tho mortified feelings of a beaten enemy , reflecting , as you must do , that you yourself cannot always expect to win . "

" Shonld it strike yon that the constitution of your game is in a shaky state , aud likely soon to broak up , abruptly draw out your watch , and declare , with an appearance of much vexation , that you havo a pressing engagement at a certain hour , and that you must

incontinently go , as your time is up . Your antagonist may probably hint that your game is up , as well as your time , in which case indignantly assert ( without particularising on which side ) , that you distinctly see checkmate in a few moves , and then , staying no longer question , make yourself scarce .

Our regret is , that Captain Kennedy has not found room for more of these amusing " wrinkles . " Then comes a brief " Scene in Kies ' s Divan , " and then the papers reprinted from Punc / i . Having thus indicated at some length the character of this work , and having expressed our opinion on the very great merits it

undoubtedly exhibits , we take leave of theso Waifs and Strays , with the single remark that if any of our readers , Chess-players or not , are in want of some pleasant book to pass an odd honr or two , they will do well to read this one of Captain Kennedy ' s . If they cannot extract amusement from it they must be dull indeed .

TENNYSON ' S " IN MEMOIUAM . " —Twice in the course of the present century a great man has made the memory of a comparatively unknown friend gracious , loveable , and lasting . These tributes to dead friendship arc very beautiful . Milton elegises his Lycidas—otherwise long since forgotten . Sholley beautifies oven the beautiful memory of Adonais . Carlyle translates John Sterling from oblivion , and sets

him down m rest with the world ' s immortals . In like manner , bnt in a completer fashion than thorn all , Tennyson has perpetuated the memory of hi 3 friend , Arthur Henry Hallam . It is , for once , a fine and eqnitable adjustment of fate , that the mourner has raised his own best monumont whilst he did but endeavour to bnild that of a dead friend . Tho self-erected memorial of Ozymandias crumbles and

leaves nothing but a fragment and a name ; but the lament of David over Jonathan lives through all these centuries . Sorrow was never so lovely as in tho pages of " In Memoriam . " Any analysis , criticism , or description of the work would be here impossible . It stands alono in literature . There are greater poems in tho world , no doubt , but there is none like it . It is , by itself , a species . — -From Casaell ' s National Portrait Gallery for January .

  • Prev page
  • 1
  • 9
  • You're on page10
  • 11
  • 20
  • 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