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  • The Freemasons' Quarterly Review
  • Sept. 30, 1849
  • Page 38
  • ARE NOT AUTHORS GENERALLY FREEMASONS ?
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The Freemasons' Quarterly Review, Sept. 30, 1849: Page 38

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Page 38

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

Are Not Authors Generally Freemasons ?

Gil Pirez and the liruxa *— " In those goo : ] old days , watches , steam engines , political economy , and most other of the wicked inventions ofthe Freemasons , were unknown . " Rentley ' s Magazine , Dec . 1847 , p . 600— " The Elkanee , hereditary chief of the Elcants , was an old man of very distingue appearance , and seemed born to command . He asked us questions about

many England , and expressed a great desire for an English wife . Above all things , however , his greatest ambition was to become a Freemason , and he begged of us to make him one , if it were possible , as , according to his idea , all Europeans were Freemasons , and that was the reason of their being so superior to Asiatics in science and the art of war . "t

Metropolitan Magazine Jan . 1846 , p . 283 . — "I belong to the hungry and barren lands you so bitterly denounced in the 'Tour to ' 'he-Hebrides , ' but authors ought to meet with the brotherly love of Freemasons , no matter what their origin . "J Query—If the author of these dialogues be not a Mason , how comes , this pointed allusion ? Harold , vol . i . p . 64 . Sir E . B . Lytton . London Bridye . — " ' Ay , "

said Edward , ( the king ) , ' it is said to have been built by the Romans , and one of the old Lombard Freemasons employed on my new palace of Westminster , giveth that , and some others in my domain ,, the name of the Juiliet Tower . '"

The Masonic Volunteer's Coat.

THE MASONIC VOLUNTEER'S COAT .

"ONCE upon a time , " when the naughty man Bony Party , the old bogy of nurses and children , amused himself by threatening old England with an invasion , it pleased " the lieges" of the metropolis to embody as volunteers—and all London marched about like a bee-hive en masse . Among this national army of enthusiasts was a brother , of whom it has been often our honourable duty to speak , and not merely among them , but often foremost was he at muster and at drill ; proverbial for the correctness of his discipline , as for his soldier-like

appearance , of which he during a long and useful life , gave happy recollection , in the upright carriage and firm step which tended to impose upon those whose senior he was by a good score of years . One unlucky day , however , ( and who has not their unlucky days ) , he , while examining the works of a Geneva watch , which Mr . Bony ' s orders in Council had made somewhat scarce , -forgot the very moment , which in warlike phrase is termed- ' military time . " At this very instantin popped

, , some comrades and jeered him on his tardiness . " Time , " cries the volunteer comrade . " Time " cried he of the three balls—call again to-morrow , to bis customer was all he deigned to utter— off went his coat , on went his military jacket—and off he marched with a true martial carriage .

“The Freemasons' Quarterly Review: 1849-09-30, Page 38” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 13 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fqr/issues/fqr_30091849/page/38/.
  • 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
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Page 38

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

Are Not Authors Generally Freemasons ?

Gil Pirez and the liruxa *— " In those goo : ] old days , watches , steam engines , political economy , and most other of the wicked inventions ofthe Freemasons , were unknown . " Rentley ' s Magazine , Dec . 1847 , p . 600— " The Elkanee , hereditary chief of the Elcants , was an old man of very distingue appearance , and seemed born to command . He asked us questions about

many England , and expressed a great desire for an English wife . Above all things , however , his greatest ambition was to become a Freemason , and he begged of us to make him one , if it were possible , as , according to his idea , all Europeans were Freemasons , and that was the reason of their being so superior to Asiatics in science and the art of war . "t

Metropolitan Magazine Jan . 1846 , p . 283 . — "I belong to the hungry and barren lands you so bitterly denounced in the 'Tour to ' 'he-Hebrides , ' but authors ought to meet with the brotherly love of Freemasons , no matter what their origin . "J Query—If the author of these dialogues be not a Mason , how comes , this pointed allusion ? Harold , vol . i . p . 64 . Sir E . B . Lytton . London Bridye . — " ' Ay , "

said Edward , ( the king ) , ' it is said to have been built by the Romans , and one of the old Lombard Freemasons employed on my new palace of Westminster , giveth that , and some others in my domain ,, the name of the Juiliet Tower . '"

The Masonic Volunteer's Coat.

THE MASONIC VOLUNTEER'S COAT .

"ONCE upon a time , " when the naughty man Bony Party , the old bogy of nurses and children , amused himself by threatening old England with an invasion , it pleased " the lieges" of the metropolis to embody as volunteers—and all London marched about like a bee-hive en masse . Among this national army of enthusiasts was a brother , of whom it has been often our honourable duty to speak , and not merely among them , but often foremost was he at muster and at drill ; proverbial for the correctness of his discipline , as for his soldier-like

appearance , of which he during a long and useful life , gave happy recollection , in the upright carriage and firm step which tended to impose upon those whose senior he was by a good score of years . One unlucky day , however , ( and who has not their unlucky days ) , he , while examining the works of a Geneva watch , which Mr . Bony ' s orders in Council had made somewhat scarce , -forgot the very moment , which in warlike phrase is termed- ' military time . " At this very instantin popped

, , some comrades and jeered him on his tardiness . " Time , " cries the volunteer comrade . " Time " cried he of the three balls—call again to-morrow , to bis customer was all he deigned to utter— off went his coat , on went his military jacket—and off he marched with a true martial carriage .

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