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  • The Freemasons' Quarterly Review
  • Sept. 30, 1849
  • Page 75
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The Freemasons' Quarterly Review, Sept. 30, 1849: Page 75

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    Article PROVINCIAL. ← Page 15 of 18 →
Page 75

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Provincial.

namely , that he was a worthy , fit , and a proper successor to the royal duke who had formerly occupied the masonic throne . The health of the Earl of Yarborough , the Deputy Grand Master of England , was then drunk with much applause . The P . G . M . then proposed the health of a brother , who , he was sure , was sincerely respected by all present , " His Excellency Major-General BellLieutenant-Governor of Guernsey . "

, This was followed by " The Bailiff and Civil Authorities of Guernsey , " and " The Very Rev . the Dean and Clergy of Guernsey . " The Rev . FREDERICK JEREMIE lamented that the task of acknowledging the latter toast had fallen to so humble an individual as himself , for highly as he honoured the sacred profession to which he belonged , so did he humble himself before it . AVith respect to the institution which they were then celebrating , he would saythat slight as was the

, glimpse which he had had of Masonry , he had seen enough of it to make him heartily desire that every clergyman would become a brother . Charity and brotherly love were the basis of Masonry , and the extension of these principles would , he believed , be materially aided if the clergy generally were Masons .

The P . G . M . said that , in proposing the army and navy , he must couple those services with the name of an illustrious brother . He therefore proposed " The Duke of AVellington , and the Army and Navy . " Bro . Colonel LANE returned thanks for the army , observing that Masons were very numerous in the service , and that Masonry greatly contributed to produce amongst the men that good feeling which was so essential in every regiment . Bro . Captain MANSELLR . N . in responding for the navy saidthat

, , , he fully concurred in the opinion expressed by Colonel Lane as to the excellent influence of Masonry . The Rev . Bro . Vi'oon , D . P . G . M ., said he had then a duty toperform , which he undertook with a feeling of regret on the score of his inability to do justice to the toast which he was about to propose— " The R . AV . Bro . Hammond , Provincial Grand Master . " Knowing the high personal character of the Grand Masterand his earnest devotion to the

, cause of Masonry , he was thoroughly convinced that his appointment to the office , in which he had that day been installed , would very greatly conduce to the promotion and prosperity of Masonry in that island . The P . G . M . could not adequately express his feeling of gratitude for the kind manner in which his brethren had received the toast that

had just been proposed . If his acknowledgments were imperfect , the deficiency must not be attributed to want of gratitude , but to the overpowering nature of the feelings which had been excited in him , and to which his tongue was unable to give utterance . All that he could do was to beg that his brethren would receive his most grateful thanks . It was customary on occasions like the present , to make some remarks on the nature ancl characteristics of Masonry , for the purpose of making the institution better understood and appreciated by those who did not

belong to it . There was , perhaps , no institution which was so little comprehended , or so much misrepresented . It had been said that Masonry was disloyal and irreligious in its principles . How diametrically opposite to the truth was this assertion ! It would need but few words to refute

the ignorant misrepresentation . Every brother must know that loyalty and religion were the fundamental principles of the Order , and that a good Mason and a bad man were a contradiction iu terms . To disprove

“The Freemasons' Quarterly Review: 1849-09-30, Page 75” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 13 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fqr/issues/fqr_30091849/page/75/.
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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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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Provincial.

namely , that he was a worthy , fit , and a proper successor to the royal duke who had formerly occupied the masonic throne . The health of the Earl of Yarborough , the Deputy Grand Master of England , was then drunk with much applause . The P . G . M . then proposed the health of a brother , who , he was sure , was sincerely respected by all present , " His Excellency Major-General BellLieutenant-Governor of Guernsey . "

, This was followed by " The Bailiff and Civil Authorities of Guernsey , " and " The Very Rev . the Dean and Clergy of Guernsey . " The Rev . FREDERICK JEREMIE lamented that the task of acknowledging the latter toast had fallen to so humble an individual as himself , for highly as he honoured the sacred profession to which he belonged , so did he humble himself before it . AVith respect to the institution which they were then celebrating , he would saythat slight as was the

, glimpse which he had had of Masonry , he had seen enough of it to make him heartily desire that every clergyman would become a brother . Charity and brotherly love were the basis of Masonry , and the extension of these principles would , he believed , be materially aided if the clergy generally were Masons .

The P . G . M . said that , in proposing the army and navy , he must couple those services with the name of an illustrious brother . He therefore proposed " The Duke of AVellington , and the Army and Navy . " Bro . Colonel LANE returned thanks for the army , observing that Masons were very numerous in the service , and that Masonry greatly contributed to produce amongst the men that good feeling which was so essential in every regiment . Bro . Captain MANSELLR . N . in responding for the navy saidthat

, , , he fully concurred in the opinion expressed by Colonel Lane as to the excellent influence of Masonry . The Rev . Bro . Vi'oon , D . P . G . M ., said he had then a duty toperform , which he undertook with a feeling of regret on the score of his inability to do justice to the toast which he was about to propose— " The R . AV . Bro . Hammond , Provincial Grand Master . " Knowing the high personal character of the Grand Masterand his earnest devotion to the

, cause of Masonry , he was thoroughly convinced that his appointment to the office , in which he had that day been installed , would very greatly conduce to the promotion and prosperity of Masonry in that island . The P . G . M . could not adequately express his feeling of gratitude for the kind manner in which his brethren had received the toast that

had just been proposed . If his acknowledgments were imperfect , the deficiency must not be attributed to want of gratitude , but to the overpowering nature of the feelings which had been excited in him , and to which his tongue was unable to give utterance . All that he could do was to beg that his brethren would receive his most grateful thanks . It was customary on occasions like the present , to make some remarks on the nature ancl characteristics of Masonry , for the purpose of making the institution better understood and appreciated by those who did not

belong to it . There was , perhaps , no institution which was so little comprehended , or so much misrepresented . It had been said that Masonry was disloyal and irreligious in its principles . How diametrically opposite to the truth was this assertion ! It would need but few words to refute

the ignorant misrepresentation . Every brother must know that loyalty and religion were the fundamental principles of the Order , and that a good Mason and a bad man were a contradiction iu terms . To disprove

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