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  • June 30, 1848
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The Freemasons' Quarterly Review, June 30, 1848: Page 105

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    Article INDIA. ← Page 2 of 4 →
Page 105

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India.

the absolute exigency of the case being , I should think , ample protection from the abuse of a deviation from a fixed rule necessary to be observed in England , but from which the peculiar circumstances of a foreign lodge may require some exemption ; and the assimilation of the rules and practice of English to Scotch and Irish lodges on these not very material points , would be attended with an incalculable amount of goodancl maintain the Catholic character of the Craft more integrall

, y than the present different observances appear to characterize it . Lodge No . 748 lately had a narrow escape from legal extinction by the Book of Constitutions , in consequence of the difficulty in procuring a duly qualified brother to relieve the W . M ., ivho hacl served two years , and the non-receipt of any dispensation from the Grand Lodge , though applied for in the month of March last . In places like this , where the brethren are so frequently leaving the settlementthese

, emergencies must be expected , and lodges in such cases shouldhavepower to elect the W . M ., or a brother who has been previously appointed a Warden , without reference to the time he has served in that office . It is fortunate that the lodge has been able to obtain the services of its present active and zealous Master without infringing the existing laws ; but certainly we are not indebted to the care and attention of the Grand Lodge officials for our preservation from extinction , which the operation

of this rule would otherwise have produced ; and a flourishing lodge , which has received the highest commendations from numerous visitors from Calcutta , China , Batavia , and continental Europe , has thus been exposed to constitutional annihilation . Surely the rigidity of laws which may thus be attended with destructive effects should be modified to suit the peculiar circumstances of foreign lodges , who have nothing to depend upon for safety but hopeless references , which are seldom so much as acknowledged , and which I verily believe are systematically withheld from the notice of the Grand Master to save the trouble which

must otherwise ensue to the Grand Secretary , and his subordinates , who I fancy are not sufficiently remunerated to attend to anything more than register and certificate fees , otherwise there is indeed most crying need of a radical reform in that department , and you who are nearest the fountain head of evil can better tell where it lies , and the most appropriate remedy , I should think the Grand Secretary , for his own ease and convenience , would advocate these relaxations , for they must be attended with the entire cessation of complaints like thisas the

, exciting cause will then be entirely removed . The brethren here , I can venture to affirm , feel much regret that they are not supported in the question of the relaxation of the required interval between degrees by so high and respected an authority as the " Freemasons' Quarterly Review ; " and however reluctant they may be to oppose their sentiments to its views upon this or any other subject , they cannot in the face of their long felt need of this most useful reform

alter their opinions upon a question of so much vital importance to the Craft on foreign stations ; and I trust that the very different circumstances which exist in home and foreign lodges will eventually reconcile you to a measure which we conscientiously believe will be highly useful to us , and all other lodges in foreign parts . In your remarks on my namesake ' s letter , you give us some very useful information on the law of expulsion , which has , to my certain knowledge , been for years in vain solicited from the Grand Loclge , by another lodge in the Straits . If that lodge did wrong in expelling one of its members ,, why , I would ask , was it not explicitly so told them

“The Freemasons' Quarterly Review: 1848-06-30, Page 105” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 16 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fqr/issues/fqr_30061848/page/105/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
THE FREEMASONS' QUARTERLYREVIEW, Article 1
MASONIC REPROOF. Article 8
ON FREEMASONRY, Article 9
CHAPTER II. Article 14
THE FREEMASONS' LEXICON. Article 18
IMPORTANT MASONIC RECORD. Article 26
AM ACCOUNT OF THE NEAPOLITAN MASONRY ; Article 31
A SUCCINCT ACCOUNT OF THE LIFE OF THE WRITER. Article 33
TO THE EDITOR. Article 40
TO THE EDITOR. Article 40
TO THE EDITOR. Article 41
TO THE EDITOR. Article 43
TO THE EDITOR. Article 45
TO THE EDITOR. Article 45
MASONIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 46
UNITED GRAND LODGE OF ENGLAND. Article 47
QUARTERLY COMMUNICATION, JUNE 7. Article 58
GRAND CONCLAVE OF ENGLAND AND WALES. Article 64
THE EARLY GRAND ENCAMPMENT OF ENGLAND AND CONCLAVE OF FAITH AND FIDELITY. Article 66
THE FREDERICK ENCAMPMENT, Article 66
SUPREME GRAND COUNCIL FOR ENGLAND AND WALES. Article 67
RE-UNION OF THE BURLINGTON AND BANK OF ENGLAND LODGES. Article 68
THE CHARITIES. Article 69
ASYLUM FOR WORTHY AGED AND DECAYED FREEMASONS. Article 70
Untitled Article 71
CHIT CHAT. Article 80
Obituary. Article 87
PROVINCIAL. Article 90
SCOTLAND. Article 98
IRELAND. Article 99
FOREIGN. Article 102
INDIA. Article 104
THE GENERAL ASSURANCE ADVOCATE. Article 108
LITERARY NOTICES. Article 116
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 119
CONTENTS. Article 121
TO THE MANAGING DIRECTOR S, ACTUARIES, & SECRETARIES , OF INSURANCE COMPANIES. Article 122
W^^^^^^^^^^^^^M^M Article 123
GALL'S ANTIBILIOUS PILLS —Tbe most usefu... Article 124
FREEMASONS' QUARTERLY ADVERTISER. SECOND... Article 125
FREEMASONS' HOTEL, GREAT QUEEN STREET, L... Article 126
EREEMASONRY. OROTHER J. CURTIS, PIER HOT... Article 126
FREEMASONRY. LINE ENGRAVING OF THE STATU... Article 126
FREEMASONRY. BROTHER J. P. ACKLAM, MASON... Article 127
BEMOTAI ! !! W. EVANS, MASONIC JEWELLER ... Article 127
FREEMASONRY. A. D. LOEWENSTARK, MANUFACT... Article 127
Untitled Ad 128
Untitled Ad 128
Untitled Ad 128
Untitled Ad 128
CLERICAL, MEDICAL, AND GENERAL LIFE ASSURANCE SOCIETY. Article 129
BONUSES. The two first Divisions average... Article 129
MUTUAL LIEE ASSURANCE SOCIETY, HEAD OFFI... Article 130
HPOSSVILL & Co.'s CIGAR WAREHOUSES, G an... Article 132
ECONOMY! ECONOMY! STEPHENS' DYES for STA... Article 132
C O MFO R T F OR TENDE R FEET , c. "OALL... Article 132
GOVERNESSES BENEVOLENT INSTITUTION. Enro... Article 133
^ THl^DHi^ : y;;SAMU^ :.-oiu a_cPunt';of... Article 137
^jU^S^MK^ tt ^ ftt ^ SS ^ ^ ^ ii ^ ^ f ^... Article 137
§|}irap|s^^ Ipj^l^pi&R ^^^ I^S-SeJI^p^eh... Article 137
^^i^iiiii^^^^ijiiiiii^wiii3 Article 138
jjJjSlll^^ lllifpff^^ g§ffi||lj &i%^^ Article 138
SBSSH^^ iisiiiftifii^^ ¦ w:*£.?k-5Q^ Article 138
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Page 105

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

India.

the absolute exigency of the case being , I should think , ample protection from the abuse of a deviation from a fixed rule necessary to be observed in England , but from which the peculiar circumstances of a foreign lodge may require some exemption ; and the assimilation of the rules and practice of English to Scotch and Irish lodges on these not very material points , would be attended with an incalculable amount of goodancl maintain the Catholic character of the Craft more integrall

, y than the present different observances appear to characterize it . Lodge No . 748 lately had a narrow escape from legal extinction by the Book of Constitutions , in consequence of the difficulty in procuring a duly qualified brother to relieve the W . M ., ivho hacl served two years , and the non-receipt of any dispensation from the Grand Lodge , though applied for in the month of March last . In places like this , where the brethren are so frequently leaving the settlementthese

, emergencies must be expected , and lodges in such cases shouldhavepower to elect the W . M ., or a brother who has been previously appointed a Warden , without reference to the time he has served in that office . It is fortunate that the lodge has been able to obtain the services of its present active and zealous Master without infringing the existing laws ; but certainly we are not indebted to the care and attention of the Grand Lodge officials for our preservation from extinction , which the operation

of this rule would otherwise have produced ; and a flourishing lodge , which has received the highest commendations from numerous visitors from Calcutta , China , Batavia , and continental Europe , has thus been exposed to constitutional annihilation . Surely the rigidity of laws which may thus be attended with destructive effects should be modified to suit the peculiar circumstances of foreign lodges , who have nothing to depend upon for safety but hopeless references , which are seldom so much as acknowledged , and which I verily believe are systematically withheld from the notice of the Grand Master to save the trouble which

must otherwise ensue to the Grand Secretary , and his subordinates , who I fancy are not sufficiently remunerated to attend to anything more than register and certificate fees , otherwise there is indeed most crying need of a radical reform in that department , and you who are nearest the fountain head of evil can better tell where it lies , and the most appropriate remedy , I should think the Grand Secretary , for his own ease and convenience , would advocate these relaxations , for they must be attended with the entire cessation of complaints like thisas the

, exciting cause will then be entirely removed . The brethren here , I can venture to affirm , feel much regret that they are not supported in the question of the relaxation of the required interval between degrees by so high and respected an authority as the " Freemasons' Quarterly Review ; " and however reluctant they may be to oppose their sentiments to its views upon this or any other subject , they cannot in the face of their long felt need of this most useful reform

alter their opinions upon a question of so much vital importance to the Craft on foreign stations ; and I trust that the very different circumstances which exist in home and foreign lodges will eventually reconcile you to a measure which we conscientiously believe will be highly useful to us , and all other lodges in foreign parts . In your remarks on my namesake ' s letter , you give us some very useful information on the law of expulsion , which has , to my certain knowledge , been for years in vain solicited from the Grand Loclge , by another lodge in the Straits . If that lodge did wrong in expelling one of its members ,, why , I would ask , was it not explicitly so told them

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