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  • The Freemason's Chronicle
  • April 22, 1876
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  • MASONIC PORTRAITS (No. 25). AN ABLE PRECEPTOR.
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Masonic Portraits (No. 25). An Able Preceptor.

Fatherland . He was born in Prussian Poland , in tho yoa ; 1821 , and was educated in the district school of Fraustatli . on the borders of Silesia . On leaving school , he entered a merchant's counting-house , but disliking his position 01 his employment , ho came to England with tho view of

pushing his fortune , and landed at Blackwall , in lb'w . friendless , aud with little of this world ' s goods to spare . Happily , he fell in with friends , and was soon engaged in tho

warehouse of a wholesale dealer . By steady industry and attention to business , he managed to rise in tho estimation of his superiors , and was speedily transferred to a position of trust aud confidence in the counting-house . When he

arrived in this country , he did not understand a word of English , and during his studies he never had a master ; yet his knowledge of our language would shamo many a native . His letters and papers on Masonry are admirably

and lucidly written , and bear all the marks of a powerful and comprehensive mind . During his career in the mercantile house to which we have referred , he married , and has now three daughters . But he was not fated to

remain long in a condition of servitude . It was his ambition to be his own master , and at a timo when the new art of " sun painting" was beginning to attract popular notice he ventured to turn his attention to it , and started like a brave , courageous man as ho is , as a professor

of tho art of photography . At this time he knew little of the technical portion of the business , but his steady determination helped him to conquer all tho difficulties of the art , and at the present time he is the master of a good business , and is second to none of his contemporaries in artistic skill or conscientious attention to his clients .

Our brother ' s Masonic career commenced in the year 1861 , when he was initiated in the Lodge of Faith . He became Master in 186 G but resigned his connection with the Lodge in 1873 , and is now a member of No . 185 . In 1868 he was exalted , in Victoria Chapter ; and was

advanced , in Mark Lodge , Newport , Isle of Wight , in 1871 . He was one of the founders of Faith Chapter , and became -Z . designate in 1873 . He was also one of the original Projectors of the Temple Mark Lodge , No . 173 , and is at the present time its S . W . He has served as Secretary of the

Confidence Lodge of Instruction , and , upon the retirement of Bro . T . Foulger from the offioe of Preceptor , he succeeded him in that office , which he has held with high distinction for several years . He has been Preceptor of other Lodges of Instruction , and has , we need scarcely say , rendered

eminent services to the Craft . He was one of the promoters of the fund for the establishment of a Freemasons ' Life Boat , and acted as secretary during the period of incubation , but , although a testimonial was proposed , with a view of marking the universal appreciation of his valuable

services in connection with the fund , it was refused by oui hero , who accounted himself sufficiently ' rewarded for his laborious services by the brilliant results achieved . Tho boat was stationed at North Berwick , and has , we believe , rendered signal service on more than one occasion to distressed mariners .

Our brother is regarded by those who are capable of forming an opinion on the subject as a profoundly learned Mason . He is perfect in ritual to the very letter , and , indeed , there is no portion of Craft or Arch Masonry , whether it be ceremony , sections or installation , of which he is not

a perfect master . His fame , indeed , as an able Preceptor has been sounded far and wide in the Masonic World , and it has been his fortune to instruct many brothers who have since risen to high distinction in the Craft . If our hero ' s life has been uneventful , it is not wanting in lessons , which aro valuable , indeed , to thoso who can read them .

Industry , integrity and earnestness aro his characteristics , and with these weapons , and no others , he has conquered . He is a member of that grand old race which , from the days of Abraham to the present time , has been remarkable for its God-fearing , virtue-loving propensities . Our opinion of

the Jews has already . been expressed in these columns , and we need merely say of our brother that his charities in connection with his people are princely . While wc are writing , we have before us a scrap of paper which eloquently speaks of his munificence in this respect . It is a

subscription sheet , and has reference to the building fund of the East London Synagogue . It came into our hands by the merest chanco , yet on glancing our eve over it we find that our

generous brother has placed his name against two figures which represent a considerable sum in hard cash . He has always a coin and a pleasant word for a distressed Mason , be he Christian or Deist ; but he does not forget

Masonic Portraits (No. 25). An Able Preceptor.

his own people , and possibly if we could search his heart we should find that where the relig ion of his fathers is concerned , the joy of giving is immeasurably superior to tho pleasure of receiving . Loved at homo , responded abroad , a pillar of Masonry , and a pious man , who really believes

that God punishes the unjust man iu this world ( would to Heaven that this belief wero imiversal !) He has littlo occasion to sigh over unrealised dreams of ambition . His genius might have helped him to great things , but he has preferred the path of quiet virtue , the straight and narrow road which leads to social , domestic , and religions peace .

Odds And Ends.

ODDS AND ENDS .

By Waiter Spencer , F . B . G . S . IN last week ' s news we read , that General Kirkham . ( said to be the bearer of a letter from King John of Abyssinia , to Earl Derby ) remains a prisoner in Massowah . It may not be generally known that this officer served in

the " river Victorious Army , " under Gordon , was twice dangerously wounded , and distinguished himself throughout that campaign . In tho attack on Soochow , a bullet fractured his skull , and the portion of bone which had

been depressed upon the brain was removed by trepanning ; this he afterwards had mounted into a small model of a skull , which lie wore as a breastpin . The last night I spent at Shanghai was in Kirkham ' s quarters , and little

could either of us imagine that twelve years afterwards he and his old commander would be engaged on opposite sides , Gordon again pressing forward to conquest , and himself a prisoner of the Khedive .

Well I remember a pleasant sojourn during that troublous time of Taipingdom , in company with another officer and a guard of green turbans , at the old Buddhist monastery of Tien-tang-. I , a wretched invalid with dysentery , had to

nurse and watch my comrade most carefully to prevent his turning his head or straining his neck , for he was wounded in dangerous proximity to the jugular . The vast Temple , with its echoing pavements , the cool forest glades in which

it is embowered , in strong contrast to past scenes of turmoil , made it to us indeed an abode of peace . Yet even to this sacred spot , and in those early times , the foreign snob was not unknown . Young England and

America would occasionally break in npon its solitudes in the shape of a shooting or exploring party from one of the foreign settlements : and only they who have witnessed the reckless and contemptuous behaviour of somo of the

younger , aud ( let me hope ) the less refined of Europeans in the East , can understand the shock which the inoffensive natives must frequently experience . The banging of firearms would then resouud iu the Temple precincts , the fish

be stirred up in the sacred tank , over painted wall and sculptured plinth doggrel obscenity and cockney ' s autographs record the inroad . In condemnation of this latter ,

I affixed a document like the usual Chinese porch-texts , by the door of the apartments allotted to visitors , with the following inscription : —¦

" The modern fool derides tho Gods of old Triumphant iu the worship of his idol—GOLDWith nose in air , aud scorn in addled brain , Struts through tho cloisters with supremo disdain . Here—mids ' t tho mom ' ries of a by-gone time ,

The last frail remnants of the once sublime—Barbariau bullies crack their silly jest , Spurn the meek priest , intrude upon his rest ,

And , with loud laughter at his looks averse , Putt' their cheroots and leave him with a curse j Whilst placid idols on their massive thrones Hollowly echo tho unwonted tones .

But you and I , my reader , who in peace Have come in quest of health and grateful ease , Good taste and feeling , iu their strong coutrol , Would keep from outragiug tho meanest soul .

And so I leave these lines ; the record poor May yet reprove the base , and check the boor . Keluctaut though I be to write at all , Where wretched rhymesters leave their ribald scrawl , And idiots scratch their namea upon tho wall , "

“The Freemason's Chronicle: 1876-04-22, Page 3” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 14 Aug. 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fcn/issues/fcn_22041876/page/3/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
GRAND LODGE, MASSACHUSETTS. Article 1
THE STUDY OF MASONRY. Article 1
MASONIC PORTRAITS (No. 25). AN ABLE PRECEPTOR. Article 2
ODDS AND ENDS. Article 3
MAGIC SYMBOLS IN MASONRY. Article 4
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 5
MASONIC JURISPRUDENCE. Article 5
BRO. REV. A. F. A. WOODFORD'S RESOLUTIONROYAL MASONIC INSTITUTION FOR BOYS. Article 5
GRAND LODGE HONOURS. Article 5
ANSWERS TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 5
CONSECRATION OF THE LEY SPRING LODGE, 1598. Article 5
REVIEWS. Article 6
THE DRAMA. Article 7
RESTORATION OF CHESTER CATHEDRAL. Article 7
THE ROYAL ORIENTAL ORDER OF SIKHA AND THE SAL B'HAI. Article 7
Untitled Ad 7
Untitled Ad 8
Untitled Ad 8
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Untitled Ad 8
Untitled Ad 8
OUR WEEKLY BUDGET. Article 8
PRESENTATION TO DR. W. P. MILLS P.M., BY LODGE 376. Article 11
DIARY FOR THE WEEK. Article 12
NOTICES OF MEETINGS. Article 12
RELIGIOUS AND MILITARY ORDERS OF THE TEMPLE AND OF ST. JOHN. Article 14
Untitled Ad 15
Untitled Ad 15
Untitled Ad 15
Untitled Ad 15
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Masonic Portraits (No. 25). An Able Preceptor.

Fatherland . He was born in Prussian Poland , in tho yoa ; 1821 , and was educated in the district school of Fraustatli . on the borders of Silesia . On leaving school , he entered a merchant's counting-house , but disliking his position 01 his employment , ho came to England with tho view of

pushing his fortune , and landed at Blackwall , in lb'w . friendless , aud with little of this world ' s goods to spare . Happily , he fell in with friends , and was soon engaged in tho

warehouse of a wholesale dealer . By steady industry and attention to business , he managed to rise in tho estimation of his superiors , and was speedily transferred to a position of trust aud confidence in the counting-house . When he

arrived in this country , he did not understand a word of English , and during his studies he never had a master ; yet his knowledge of our language would shamo many a native . His letters and papers on Masonry are admirably

and lucidly written , and bear all the marks of a powerful and comprehensive mind . During his career in the mercantile house to which we have referred , he married , and has now three daughters . But he was not fated to

remain long in a condition of servitude . It was his ambition to be his own master , and at a timo when the new art of " sun painting" was beginning to attract popular notice he ventured to turn his attention to it , and started like a brave , courageous man as ho is , as a professor

of tho art of photography . At this time he knew little of the technical portion of the business , but his steady determination helped him to conquer all tho difficulties of the art , and at the present time he is the master of a good business , and is second to none of his contemporaries in artistic skill or conscientious attention to his clients .

Our brother ' s Masonic career commenced in the year 1861 , when he was initiated in the Lodge of Faith . He became Master in 186 G but resigned his connection with the Lodge in 1873 , and is now a member of No . 185 . In 1868 he was exalted , in Victoria Chapter ; and was

advanced , in Mark Lodge , Newport , Isle of Wight , in 1871 . He was one of the founders of Faith Chapter , and became -Z . designate in 1873 . He was also one of the original Projectors of the Temple Mark Lodge , No . 173 , and is at the present time its S . W . He has served as Secretary of the

Confidence Lodge of Instruction , and , upon the retirement of Bro . T . Foulger from the offioe of Preceptor , he succeeded him in that office , which he has held with high distinction for several years . He has been Preceptor of other Lodges of Instruction , and has , we need scarcely say , rendered

eminent services to the Craft . He was one of the promoters of the fund for the establishment of a Freemasons ' Life Boat , and acted as secretary during the period of incubation , but , although a testimonial was proposed , with a view of marking the universal appreciation of his valuable

services in connection with the fund , it was refused by oui hero , who accounted himself sufficiently ' rewarded for his laborious services by the brilliant results achieved . Tho boat was stationed at North Berwick , and has , we believe , rendered signal service on more than one occasion to distressed mariners .

Our brother is regarded by those who are capable of forming an opinion on the subject as a profoundly learned Mason . He is perfect in ritual to the very letter , and , indeed , there is no portion of Craft or Arch Masonry , whether it be ceremony , sections or installation , of which he is not

a perfect master . His fame , indeed , as an able Preceptor has been sounded far and wide in the Masonic World , and it has been his fortune to instruct many brothers who have since risen to high distinction in the Craft . If our hero ' s life has been uneventful , it is not wanting in lessons , which aro valuable , indeed , to thoso who can read them .

Industry , integrity and earnestness aro his characteristics , and with these weapons , and no others , he has conquered . He is a member of that grand old race which , from the days of Abraham to the present time , has been remarkable for its God-fearing , virtue-loving propensities . Our opinion of

the Jews has already . been expressed in these columns , and we need merely say of our brother that his charities in connection with his people are princely . While wc are writing , we have before us a scrap of paper which eloquently speaks of his munificence in this respect . It is a

subscription sheet , and has reference to the building fund of the East London Synagogue . It came into our hands by the merest chanco , yet on glancing our eve over it we find that our

generous brother has placed his name against two figures which represent a considerable sum in hard cash . He has always a coin and a pleasant word for a distressed Mason , be he Christian or Deist ; but he does not forget

Masonic Portraits (No. 25). An Able Preceptor.

his own people , and possibly if we could search his heart we should find that where the relig ion of his fathers is concerned , the joy of giving is immeasurably superior to tho pleasure of receiving . Loved at homo , responded abroad , a pillar of Masonry , and a pious man , who really believes

that God punishes the unjust man iu this world ( would to Heaven that this belief wero imiversal !) He has littlo occasion to sigh over unrealised dreams of ambition . His genius might have helped him to great things , but he has preferred the path of quiet virtue , the straight and narrow road which leads to social , domestic , and religions peace .

Odds And Ends.

ODDS AND ENDS .

By Waiter Spencer , F . B . G . S . IN last week ' s news we read , that General Kirkham . ( said to be the bearer of a letter from King John of Abyssinia , to Earl Derby ) remains a prisoner in Massowah . It may not be generally known that this officer served in

the " river Victorious Army , " under Gordon , was twice dangerously wounded , and distinguished himself throughout that campaign . In tho attack on Soochow , a bullet fractured his skull , and the portion of bone which had

been depressed upon the brain was removed by trepanning ; this he afterwards had mounted into a small model of a skull , which lie wore as a breastpin . The last night I spent at Shanghai was in Kirkham ' s quarters , and little

could either of us imagine that twelve years afterwards he and his old commander would be engaged on opposite sides , Gordon again pressing forward to conquest , and himself a prisoner of the Khedive .

Well I remember a pleasant sojourn during that troublous time of Taipingdom , in company with another officer and a guard of green turbans , at the old Buddhist monastery of Tien-tang-. I , a wretched invalid with dysentery , had to

nurse and watch my comrade most carefully to prevent his turning his head or straining his neck , for he was wounded in dangerous proximity to the jugular . The vast Temple , with its echoing pavements , the cool forest glades in which

it is embowered , in strong contrast to past scenes of turmoil , made it to us indeed an abode of peace . Yet even to this sacred spot , and in those early times , the foreign snob was not unknown . Young England and

America would occasionally break in npon its solitudes in the shape of a shooting or exploring party from one of the foreign settlements : and only they who have witnessed the reckless and contemptuous behaviour of somo of the

younger , aud ( let me hope ) the less refined of Europeans in the East , can understand the shock which the inoffensive natives must frequently experience . The banging of firearms would then resouud iu the Temple precincts , the fish

be stirred up in the sacred tank , over painted wall and sculptured plinth doggrel obscenity and cockney ' s autographs record the inroad . In condemnation of this latter ,

I affixed a document like the usual Chinese porch-texts , by the door of the apartments allotted to visitors , with the following inscription : —¦

" The modern fool derides tho Gods of old Triumphant iu the worship of his idol—GOLDWith nose in air , aud scorn in addled brain , Struts through tho cloisters with supremo disdain . Here—mids ' t tho mom ' ries of a by-gone time ,

The last frail remnants of the once sublime—Barbariau bullies crack their silly jest , Spurn the meek priest , intrude upon his rest ,

And , with loud laughter at his looks averse , Putt' their cheroots and leave him with a curse j Whilst placid idols on their massive thrones Hollowly echo tho unwonted tones .

But you and I , my reader , who in peace Have come in quest of health and grateful ease , Good taste and feeling , iu their strong coutrol , Would keep from outragiug tho meanest soul .

And so I leave these lines ; the record poor May yet reprove the base , and check the boor . Keluctaut though I be to write at all , Where wretched rhymesters leave their ribald scrawl , And idiots scratch their namea upon tho wall , "

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