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  • The Freemasons' Quarterly Review
  • Sept. 30, 1849
  • Page 14
  • THE V. W. BRO. W. H. WHITE, GRAND SECRETARY.
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The Freemasons' Quarterly Review, Sept. 30, 1849: Page 14

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    Article THE V. W. BRO. W. H. WHITE, GRAND SECRETARY. ← Page 3 of 3
Page 14

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

The V. W. Bro. W. H. White, Grand Secretary.

regret to be obliged to represent our Brother with impaired hearing and eyesight ; but the fact is so , and no wonder , when it is considered that Brother White has passed the term of years allotted to man by Holy Writ . He is said , —and we believe truly—to be at times , deaf on one side , and rather blind on the other . His articulation is thick and indistinct , and at large assemblies of the Grand Lodge , many members

cannot hear one half that he mumbles . But it is said " faith comes by hearing , " and it being so , accounts in a great measure , for the misapprehension of much that our worthy functionary utters , but which is not believed , because it is not heard .

The manner of Bro . White is apparently frank , his qualities social , and his intercourse agreeable . He is somewhat below the middle stature , has a venerable physiognomy , and an easy but not elegant demeanour . His merits as a Mason are of a negative character , unless we are to rate ordinary abilities as exalted gifts , and the absence of positive evil as equivalent to qualified good . In the mere practice of the manual of

Masonry we do not hold Bro . White in very high repute for his recollection of the ritual , nor for his manner of performing the duties . We should say at no period could our Brother lay claim to any masonic excellence : plodding mediocrity seems to be the extent of his pretensions .

Whatever benefits our Grand Secretary may have conferred on the interests of the Craft ( and we do not say he has not ) we leave others to discover and determine . It may however , be now said of him , les eaux sont basses dies lui . As the most graceful thing Ceasar did was on his retirement from the capitol , so in like manner may our modern Ceasar earn a compliment by speedily seceding from an office , for the retention of which , neither his years nor his abilities can plead an excuse .

Brother White has been , and continues to be , a subscriber to all the masonic charities , except the Aged Masons' Asylum ; of which institution , like some others of the clique Imperial , he seems to have an instinctive aversion . Not satisfied with the 500 / . a year paid to Brother White as Grand

Secretary , his friends and dependants ( including all the expectants for office in futuro ) are now engaged in carrying about the begging-box ! In the language of Sir Oliver Surface in the " School for Scandal , " we will give them a sentiment , — " Here ' s all the success which begging deserves . " ITHURIEL .

“The Freemasons' Quarterly Review: 1849-09-30, Page 14” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 13 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fqr/issues/fqr_30091849/page/14/.
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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
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Page 14

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

The V. W. Bro. W. H. White, Grand Secretary.

regret to be obliged to represent our Brother with impaired hearing and eyesight ; but the fact is so , and no wonder , when it is considered that Brother White has passed the term of years allotted to man by Holy Writ . He is said , —and we believe truly—to be at times , deaf on one side , and rather blind on the other . His articulation is thick and indistinct , and at large assemblies of the Grand Lodge , many members

cannot hear one half that he mumbles . But it is said " faith comes by hearing , " and it being so , accounts in a great measure , for the misapprehension of much that our worthy functionary utters , but which is not believed , because it is not heard .

The manner of Bro . White is apparently frank , his qualities social , and his intercourse agreeable . He is somewhat below the middle stature , has a venerable physiognomy , and an easy but not elegant demeanour . His merits as a Mason are of a negative character , unless we are to rate ordinary abilities as exalted gifts , and the absence of positive evil as equivalent to qualified good . In the mere practice of the manual of

Masonry we do not hold Bro . White in very high repute for his recollection of the ritual , nor for his manner of performing the duties . We should say at no period could our Brother lay claim to any masonic excellence : plodding mediocrity seems to be the extent of his pretensions .

Whatever benefits our Grand Secretary may have conferred on the interests of the Craft ( and we do not say he has not ) we leave others to discover and determine . It may however , be now said of him , les eaux sont basses dies lui . As the most graceful thing Ceasar did was on his retirement from the capitol , so in like manner may our modern Ceasar earn a compliment by speedily seceding from an office , for the retention of which , neither his years nor his abilities can plead an excuse .

Brother White has been , and continues to be , a subscriber to all the masonic charities , except the Aged Masons' Asylum ; of which institution , like some others of the clique Imperial , he seems to have an instinctive aversion . Not satisfied with the 500 / . a year paid to Brother White as Grand

Secretary , his friends and dependants ( including all the expectants for office in futuro ) are now engaged in carrying about the begging-box ! In the language of Sir Oliver Surface in the " School for Scandal , " we will give them a sentiment , — " Here ' s all the success which begging deserves . " ITHURIEL .

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