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Article THE FREEMASONS' QUARTERLY REVIEW. ← Page 2 of 8 →
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The Freemasons' Quarterly Review.
Master , and other subordinate authorities , until the Grand Master shall be enabled to appoint his own immediate representative . The operation of this very beneficial suggestion will be productive of general advantage , and put an
end to the anxiety that has been so long existing . For the future , no power will exist of convening a Lodge anywhere but at the regular appointed place of meeting , unless by removal according to the Constitutions .
Lodges of Instruction will remain as they are , except that some more stringent authority will be delegated to the sanctioning Lodge . Provincial Grand Stewards will be permitted to wear
their " regulation apron" for life , in their respective provinces . On this subject we have elsewhere a letter . These are among the principal suggestions , but there are various others , which it is not so essential to allude to at
present . The concluding address of His Royal Highness was marked , if possible , by more than his usual earnestness—it was a gifted effort of impressive eloquence , and a succinct epitome of the first principles of nature and science . It
must live in the memory of all who listened , for it has taken root in the heart , and diffused itself in the mind , as a possessive means of reflection—to be absorbed only by the eternal principle when the Mason shall seek for solace in
the sanctuary . FINANCE , & c . —The Boards have made very satisfactory reports .
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.
The Freemasons' Quarterly Review.
Master , and other subordinate authorities , until the Grand Master shall be enabled to appoint his own immediate representative . The operation of this very beneficial suggestion will be productive of general advantage , and put an
end to the anxiety that has been so long existing . For the future , no power will exist of convening a Lodge anywhere but at the regular appointed place of meeting , unless by removal according to the Constitutions .
Lodges of Instruction will remain as they are , except that some more stringent authority will be delegated to the sanctioning Lodge . Provincial Grand Stewards will be permitted to wear
their " regulation apron" for life , in their respective provinces . On this subject we have elsewhere a letter . These are among the principal suggestions , but there are various others , which it is not so essential to allude to at
present . The concluding address of His Royal Highness was marked , if possible , by more than his usual earnestness—it was a gifted effort of impressive eloquence , and a succinct epitome of the first principles of nature and science . It
must live in the memory of all who listened , for it has taken root in the heart , and diffused itself in the mind , as a possessive means of reflection—to be absorbed only by the eternal principle when the Mason shall seek for solace in
the sanctuary . FINANCE , & c . —The Boards have made very satisfactory reports .