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  • Sept. 30, 1849
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The Freemasons' Quarterly Review, Sept. 30, 1849: Page 37

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    Article ARE NOT AUTHORS GENERALLY FREEMASONS ? ← Page 2 of 3 →
Page 37

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

Are Not Authors Generally Freemasons ?

"' Curb th y impetuosity , " said Thurnau , somewhat severely ; ' was it suitable , I could assign many reasons which justify this decision . One , however , will be evident enough to thee , and was , perhaps , the origin of this law . In that early age there existed but a very circumscribed spiritual connexion with woman ; the barbarism of the age confined her in a very narrow sphere , where , being deprived of her natural rights , she appeared an inferior creature , and alone connected with man in a

less noble sense . ' " Thurnau had silenced Magda by this reply , but to withdraw her enquiring spirit from the contemplation of this new object , he as little desired as he had been able to effect it . "

The Examiner of Oct . J 6 , 1847 , observes , in a critique on Macready ' s performance of Henry the Ei ghth , " that if the red stockings carry any Freemasonry in them , we conceive it to be simply that . " Blackwood ' s Magazine , July , 1846 . —Marlborough Dispatches , p . 31 , note 32 . — "Meanwhile Marshal Baufflers , hearing a battle was imminent , arrived in the camp as a volunteer , to serve under Villars , his junior in military service , a noble example of disinterested patriotism , which , not less than the justly popular character of that distinguished general , raised the enthusiasm of the French soldiers to the very highest pitch . *"

Blackwood , January , 1847 . — "As Mildred turned , she caught the eye of Alfred Wenston . They met this time as old acquaintances ; and that glance of intellectual Freemasonry which was interchanged between them , tended not a little to increase their feeling of intimacy . "f Hesiod and Homer . — " Museus , the disciple of Orpheus , did not seek to pervert the simplicity of worship inculcated in the following fragment of his master : — ' God is greathe is goodhe is eternalhe is one let

, , , ; us pay adoration to Mm , ' Herodotus tells us that in his day idolatry was a new thing . According to him Hesiod is the first who took upon him to give the gods a name ; and Homer was the first who ventured to embody them . It is , therefore , the imaginations of these two poets that must be charged with the perversion of the natural religion—a perversion , however , which the vivid fancy of the Greeks eagerly welcomedand carried to the highest pitch . The rulers were not slow to

, turn this disposition to the best account ; and , before long , the magistrates of all the countries were united , by means of initiation , in the bonds of one vast Freemasonry ; which explains , in some degree , the absence of religious intolerance , and accounts for the severity that was displayed towards impiety . " J

The Picaroon ; or , the Merchant Smuggler . ^— "True , Mat was a sad dog , but however just the unsavoury odour of his name among the lands folk , the Freemasonry of the ocean had made the Quaker and the pilot friends to a certain negative extent . "

“The Freemasons' Quarterly Review: 1849-09-30, Page 37” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 13 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fqr/issues/fqr_30091849/page/37/.
  • List
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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 37

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

Are Not Authors Generally Freemasons ?

"' Curb th y impetuosity , " said Thurnau , somewhat severely ; ' was it suitable , I could assign many reasons which justify this decision . One , however , will be evident enough to thee , and was , perhaps , the origin of this law . In that early age there existed but a very circumscribed spiritual connexion with woman ; the barbarism of the age confined her in a very narrow sphere , where , being deprived of her natural rights , she appeared an inferior creature , and alone connected with man in a

less noble sense . ' " Thurnau had silenced Magda by this reply , but to withdraw her enquiring spirit from the contemplation of this new object , he as little desired as he had been able to effect it . "

The Examiner of Oct . J 6 , 1847 , observes , in a critique on Macready ' s performance of Henry the Ei ghth , " that if the red stockings carry any Freemasonry in them , we conceive it to be simply that . " Blackwood ' s Magazine , July , 1846 . —Marlborough Dispatches , p . 31 , note 32 . — "Meanwhile Marshal Baufflers , hearing a battle was imminent , arrived in the camp as a volunteer , to serve under Villars , his junior in military service , a noble example of disinterested patriotism , which , not less than the justly popular character of that distinguished general , raised the enthusiasm of the French soldiers to the very highest pitch . *"

Blackwood , January , 1847 . — "As Mildred turned , she caught the eye of Alfred Wenston . They met this time as old acquaintances ; and that glance of intellectual Freemasonry which was interchanged between them , tended not a little to increase their feeling of intimacy . "f Hesiod and Homer . — " Museus , the disciple of Orpheus , did not seek to pervert the simplicity of worship inculcated in the following fragment of his master : — ' God is greathe is goodhe is eternalhe is one let

, , , ; us pay adoration to Mm , ' Herodotus tells us that in his day idolatry was a new thing . According to him Hesiod is the first who took upon him to give the gods a name ; and Homer was the first who ventured to embody them . It is , therefore , the imaginations of these two poets that must be charged with the perversion of the natural religion—a perversion , however , which the vivid fancy of the Greeks eagerly welcomedand carried to the highest pitch . The rulers were not slow to

, turn this disposition to the best account ; and , before long , the magistrates of all the countries were united , by means of initiation , in the bonds of one vast Freemasonry ; which explains , in some degree , the absence of religious intolerance , and accounts for the severity that was displayed towards impiety . " J

The Picaroon ; or , the Merchant Smuggler . ^— "True , Mat was a sad dog , but however just the unsavoury odour of his name among the lands folk , the Freemasonry of the ocean had made the Quaker and the pilot friends to a certain negative extent . "

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