Skip to main content
Museum of Freemasonry

Masonic Periodicals Online

  • Explore
  • Advanced Search
  • Home
  • Explore
  • The Freemasons' Quarterly Review
  • Sept. 30, 1849
  • Page 101
Current:

The Freemasons' Quarterly Review, Sept. 30, 1849: Page 101

  • Back to The Freemasons' Quarterly Review, Sept. 30, 1849
  • Print image
  • Articles/Ads
    Article THE GENERAL ASSURANCE ADVOCATE. ← Page 4 of 6 →
Page 101

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

The General Assurance Advocate.

tiling whicli is rather than is to be , they are as helpless for their own good as infants . They must be not only able to make but they must have wealth , either in possession or assured to them at a certain ancl settled period ; something beyond the domain of uncertainty , something which mere chance cannot affect , before they can peacefully and morally work out

their own salvation , or even set about it in real earnest . How is that to be attained ? The answer seems so plain and easy , appears to he so full ancl fair in every man ' s path , that the wonder is that it is necessary to point it out . But so it ever is : men look far abroad for beauties which are close at hand : wander wide for remedies which they have only to stoop and pick up . How has all our present wealth been

created ? What has produced the vast capital against which mere labour struggles , like an infant striving with a giant ? By COMBINATION 1 Men have given themselves up , body and soul , to Competition , as though that was the only principle at the foundation of society . They have cast themselves headlong into the bubbling , foaming , roaring vortex . They have well nigh wrecked the good ship Civilization in the

whirlpool , and there they are , instead of sailing smoothly and peacefully over fair safe waters , struggling for bare existence . The many are poor , it is true , but they are many . Their mites would

be small we grant , but they would be millions ; and from their myriadmolehiils they might raise a mountain of wealth and power , the equal of which the world has never seen . This does not , it is true , apply to the utterly destitute and pauperized , but every artizan in work , every labourer having employment , might add something , and their united contributions , well managed ancl constantly accumulating , would give

them a power for good to which they have ever been strangers . We sincerely believe that all political changes are secondary , both in importance and power , to social ones ; and that the man who has secured an annuity for himself at a given age , and feels sure that he will then be independent either of labour or charity ; the man who has secured a certain provision for his family at his death ; the man who has obtained

a stake in the real property , and an interest in the prosperity of the country , will have a higher and juster sense of independence , will acquire more real influence , will have a greater solicitude for the preservation of order , will acquire an immunity from anxiety and despondence , greater than the mere possession of political power could ever give him . The machinery for all this is already in existence . Combinative

institutions in the shape of Assurance Companies and Societies , founded upon the surest bases which science and knowledge can supply , have been created by the upper and middle classes , and are as open to the worker with his shilling a week , as to the capitalist with his thousands

“The Freemasons' Quarterly Review: 1849-09-30, Page 101” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 13 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fqr/issues/fqr_30091849/page/101/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
THE FREEMASONS' QUARTERLY REVIEW, AND GENERAL ASSURANCE ADVOCATE. Article 1
TO THE CRAFT. Article 1
SIGNS OF THE TIMES. Article 3
QUARTERLY COMMUNICATION. Article 5
THE PORTRAIT GALLERY, No. 3. Article 9
THE V. W. BRO. W. H. WHITE, GRAND SECRETARY. Article 12
THE W. BROTHER JOHN BIGG, P.M.—P.Z. Article 15
THE W. BROTHERS JENNINGS AND M'MULLEN. Article 17
THE W. BROTHER JOHN SAVAGE, P. M. No. 19 & 805. Article 19
THE INEFFABLE NAME. Article 22
FREEMASONRY IN TURKEY, PERSIA, AND JAPAN. Article 27
FREEMASONRY IN CORK. Article 29
THE DEATH OF MOSES* Article 34
TALMUDIC ALLEGORY* Article 35
ARE NOT AUTHORS GENERALLY FREEMASONS ? Article 36
THE MASONIC VOLUNTEER'S COAT. Article 38
COLLECTANEA. Article 39
CHIT CHAT. Article 42
POETRY. Article 46
LINES ON FREEMASONRY. Article 47
TO THE EDITOR. Article 48
FREEMASONRY AND THE SPANISH INQUISITION. Article 49
Obituary. Article 52
MASONIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 54
UNITED GRAND LODGE OF ENGLAND. Article 55
SUPREME GRAND COUNCIL 33°. Article 55
THE CHARITIES. Article 55
ASYLUM FOR AGED AND DECAYED FREEMASONS. Article 57
THE REPORTER. Article 58
PROVINCIAL. Article 61
SCOTLAND. Article 78
IRELAND. Article 90
FOREIGN. Article 92
AMERICA.—UNITED STATES. Article 94
INDIA. Article 96
THE GENERAL ASSURANCE ADVOCATE. Article 98
THE CHOLERA. Article 103
LITERARY NOTICES. Article 105
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 109
Page 1

Page 1

2 Articles
Page 2

Page 2

1 Article
Page 3

Page 3

1 Article
Page 4

Page 4

1 Article
Page 5

Page 5

2 Articles
Page 6

Page 6

1 Article
Page 7

Page 7

1 Article
Page 8

Page 8

1 Article
Page 9

Page 9

1 Article
Page 10

Page 10

1 Article
Page 11

Page 11

1 Article
Page 12

Page 12

2 Articles
Page 13

Page 13

1 Article
Page 14

Page 14

1 Article
Page 15

Page 15

1 Article
Page 16

Page 16

1 Article
Page 17

Page 17

2 Articles
Page 18

Page 18

1 Article
Page 19

Page 19

2 Articles
Page 20

Page 20

1 Article
Page 21

Page 21

1 Article
Page 22

Page 22

1 Article
Page 23

Page 23

1 Article
Page 24

Page 24

1 Article
Page 25

Page 25

1 Article
Page 26

Page 26

1 Article
Page 27

Page 27

2 Articles
Page 28

Page 28

1 Article
Page 29

Page 29

2 Articles
Page 30

Page 30

1 Article
Page 31

Page 31

1 Article
Page 32

Page 32

1 Article
Page 33

Page 33

1 Article
Page 34

Page 34

1 Article
Page 35

Page 35

1 Article
Page 36

Page 36

1 Article
Page 37

Page 37

1 Article
Page 38

Page 38

2 Articles
Page 39

Page 39

2 Articles
Page 40

Page 40

1 Article
Page 41

Page 41

1 Article
Page 42

Page 42

2 Articles
Page 43

Page 43

1 Article
Page 44

Page 44

1 Article
Page 45

Page 45

1 Article
Page 46

Page 46

1 Article
Page 47

Page 47

2 Articles
Page 48

Page 48

1 Article
Page 49

Page 49

1 Article
Page 50

Page 50

1 Article
Page 51

Page 51

1 Article
Page 52

Page 52

2 Articles
Page 53

Page 53

1 Article
Page 54

Page 54

2 Articles
Page 55

Page 55

3 Articles
Page 56

Page 56

1 Article
Page 57

Page 57

2 Articles
Page 58

Page 58

2 Articles
Page 59

Page 59

1 Article
Page 60

Page 60

1 Article
Page 61

Page 61

2 Articles
Page 62

Page 62

1 Article
Page 63

Page 63

1 Article
Page 64

Page 64

1 Article
Page 65

Page 65

1 Article
Page 66

Page 66

1 Article
Page 67

Page 67

1 Article
Page 68

Page 68

1 Article
Page 69

Page 69

1 Article
Page 70

Page 70

1 Article
Page 71

Page 71

1 Article
Page 72

Page 72

1 Article
Page 73

Page 73

1 Article
Page 74

Page 74

1 Article
Page 75

Page 75

1 Article
Page 76

Page 76

1 Article
Page 77

Page 77

1 Article
Page 78

Page 78

2 Articles
Page 79

Page 79

1 Article
Page 80

Page 80

1 Article
Page 81

Page 81

1 Article
Page 82

Page 82

1 Article
Page 83

Page 83

1 Article
Page 84

Page 84

1 Article
Page 85

Page 85

1 Article
Page 86

Page 86

1 Article
Page 87

Page 87

1 Article
Page 88

Page 88

1 Article
Page 89

Page 89

1 Article
Page 90

Page 90

1 Article
Page 91

Page 91

1 Article
Page 92

Page 92

2 Articles
Page 93

Page 93

1 Article
Page 94

Page 94

2 Articles
Page 95

Page 95

1 Article
Page 96

Page 96

1 Article
Page 97

Page 97

1 Article
Page 98

Page 98

1 Article
Page 99

Page 99

1 Article
Page 100

Page 100

1 Article
Page 101

Page 101

1 Article
Page 102

Page 102

1 Article
Page 103

Page 103

2 Articles
Page 104

Page 104

1 Article
Page 105

Page 105

1 Article
Page 106

Page 106

1 Article
Page 107

Page 107

1 Article
Page 108

Page 108

1 Article
Page 109

Page 109

1 Article
Page 110

Page 110

1 Article
Page 101

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

The General Assurance Advocate.

tiling whicli is rather than is to be , they are as helpless for their own good as infants . They must be not only able to make but they must have wealth , either in possession or assured to them at a certain ancl settled period ; something beyond the domain of uncertainty , something which mere chance cannot affect , before they can peacefully and morally work out

their own salvation , or even set about it in real earnest . How is that to be attained ? The answer seems so plain and easy , appears to he so full ancl fair in every man ' s path , that the wonder is that it is necessary to point it out . But so it ever is : men look far abroad for beauties which are close at hand : wander wide for remedies which they have only to stoop and pick up . How has all our present wealth been

created ? What has produced the vast capital against which mere labour struggles , like an infant striving with a giant ? By COMBINATION 1 Men have given themselves up , body and soul , to Competition , as though that was the only principle at the foundation of society . They have cast themselves headlong into the bubbling , foaming , roaring vortex . They have well nigh wrecked the good ship Civilization in the

whirlpool , and there they are , instead of sailing smoothly and peacefully over fair safe waters , struggling for bare existence . The many are poor , it is true , but they are many . Their mites would

be small we grant , but they would be millions ; and from their myriadmolehiils they might raise a mountain of wealth and power , the equal of which the world has never seen . This does not , it is true , apply to the utterly destitute and pauperized , but every artizan in work , every labourer having employment , might add something , and their united contributions , well managed ancl constantly accumulating , would give

them a power for good to which they have ever been strangers . We sincerely believe that all political changes are secondary , both in importance and power , to social ones ; and that the man who has secured an annuity for himself at a given age , and feels sure that he will then be independent either of labour or charity ; the man who has secured a certain provision for his family at his death ; the man who has obtained

a stake in the real property , and an interest in the prosperity of the country , will have a higher and juster sense of independence , will acquire more real influence , will have a greater solicitude for the preservation of order , will acquire an immunity from anxiety and despondence , greater than the mere possession of political power could ever give him . The machinery for all this is already in existence . Combinative

institutions in the shape of Assurance Companies and Societies , founded upon the surest bases which science and knowledge can supply , have been created by the upper and middle classes , and are as open to the worker with his shilling a week , as to the capitalist with his thousands

  • Prev page
  • 1
  • 100
  • You're on page101
  • 102
  • 110
  • 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