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  • Dec. 31, 1837
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The Freemasons' Quarterly Review, Dec. 31, 1837: Page 110

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    Article SCOTLAND. ← Page 11 of 19 →
Page 110

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Scotland.

in the Royal Art , it remains with me now to finish our ivork . " He then gave three knocks on the stone , and said , " May this undertaking be conducted and completed by the Craftsmen according to the Grand Plan , in Peace , Love , and Harmony , "—the music thereafter jilaying " tin , my dear Brethren , " during which the cornucopia and cujis , with the wine and oil , were given to the Sub-Grand Master , the Senior and Junior Grand Wardens . These tbey delivered to the Grand Masterin

, turn , who spread the corn , the wine , and the oil on the stone , and pronounced the G rand Benediction— " May corn , wine , and oil , and all the necessaries of life , abound among men throughout the world , and may the blessing of the Supreme Grand Architect of the Universe be upon this undertaking , and may it be preserved to the latest ages , in order that it may promote the views for which this monument is to be erected . " The band then played the " Mason ' s Anthem , " and the Grand Master

returned to the platform . The music having ceased , The Lord Provost said—Principal Macfarlane and gentlemen , we have performed an act ivhich , while it honours the dead , at the same time honours the living . By erecting a monument to departed genius we leave to our posterity a tangible proof that the generations among whom Sir AValter Scott lived were in so far worth y of him that they could appreciate his merits . AVe have been doing what more perhaps than any other act , helps society forward in the road of social improvement . Every monument erected to a great and good man is an ever fresh moral

lesson to the public . ( Cheers . ) We have been doing what tends to cement society—in all that concerns men—in the matters of public and domestic life—in the certainties of this world and the hopes of the next . ( Loud cheers . ) There are , and in our nature there ever must be , a diversity of opinions and affections . Experience seems to teach that in the society where these are most freely exjiressed—where men most freely emulate each other in endeavours to promote their favourite views

—the greatest discoveries are made , and the greatest actions are performed . But rivalry and emulation alienate men and cultivate the less amiable passions . ( Great ajijilause . ) It is good , therefore , to seize on all those occasions which can re-unite us in that love ivhich is one of the best attributes of our nature ; and what occasion can there be so well fitted for this purpose as when men of every creed and every opinion which divide society , unite in common homage to the memory of some

distinguished fellow-citizen . Their common admiration teaches them that , liowever widel y tbey may differ , tbey still have one common nature , and that their points of resemblance form exactly what is noblest about them . There could not be a mind more admirably constituted for producing this desirable effect than that of the great man whose memory we meet to honour . Those of his works which will live with the nation ' s language are not controversial , stirring up strife ; they are pictures of

life , around which all men gather , to derive enjoyment . Their distinguished features arc the power of noting and exjiressing the peculiarities of character , as well as the fertility of invention . AVe , from whose firesides—from the livina . inmates of whose domestic circles his characters

were drawn—can feel ami attest their identity with nature . AVe have sat at table with—we have shaken hands with—we have quarrelled and been friends with—his Dandie Dinmonts , his Cuddie Headriggs , and last , though not least , his Bailie Nicol Jarvics . There can be no testimony to the truth of his portraits so strong and credible as ours . But . it is from those less familiar with his prototypes that testimony must bo

“The Freemasons' Quarterly Review: 1837-12-31, Page 110” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 12 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fqr/issues/fqr_31121837/page/110/.
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Title Category Page
CONTENTS. Article 1
GRAND LODGE OF ENGLAND, Dec. G, 1S37 :— ... Article 2
THE FREEMASONS' QUARTERLY REVIEW. Article 3
ON FREEMASONRY. THE SPURIOUS FREEMASONRY OF ANCIENT TIMES. Article 11
THE ARCHITECTURE OF THE HEAVENS. Article 21
MASONIC DIDACTICS; Article 24
A GLANCE AT ADOPTIVE MASONRY. Article 26
MASONRY RESTORED TO ITS GENUINE PRINCIPLES. Article 31
ON THE MYSTIC NUMBERS, 9 AND 15. Article 36
TO THE EDITOR. Article 38
NOTITIÆ TEMPLARIÆ, No. 5. Article 40
INTERESTING MASONIC NARRATIVE. Article 42
TO THE EDITOR. Article 45
THE STUDENTS. Article 47
THE EMPEROR AND THE LOCUSTS. Article 53
THE DEAN AND THE MAGICIAN; Article 55
HERCULANEUM. Article 60
EPIGRAM. —MARTIAL 20. Article 62
HYMN TO THE SUN. Article 63
THE MARINER'S TOAST. Article 63
THE PARTING SONG. " Article 64
MASONIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 65
QUARTERLY COMMUNICATION. Article 67
THE CHARITIES. Article 74
LODGE REPORTS. Article 76
MASONIC CHIT CHAT. Article 78
Obituary. Article 79
PROVINCIAL. Article 82
SCOTLAND. Article 100
IRELAND. Article 119
FOREIGN. Article 125
INDIA. Article 125
REVIEW OF LITERATURE. Article 128
THE MASON'S FAREWELL TO THE BY-GONE YEAR. Article 134
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 137
'¦¦A ' 'A^A-A'Af AyA: : iAy-A^ A Article 139
Untitled Ad 141
ON THE FIRST OF JANUARY, 183S, WAS PUBLI... Article 142
FREEMASONS' QUARTERLY ADVERTISER, j Article 143
FREEMASONRY. ROYAL FREEMASONS' SCHOOL FO... Article 144
FREEMASONRYROYAL MASONIC INSTITUTION, Fo... Article 144
FREEMASONRY. ASYLUM FOR AGED AND DECAYED... Article 144
FREEMASONRY. MOUNT MORIAH LODGE OF INSTR... Article 144
FREEMASONRY. TO BRETHREN VISITING LONDON... Article 145
FREEMASONRY. J. P. A C K L A M, MASONIC ... Article 145
FREEMASONRY. WATCHES, PLATE, AND JEWELLE... Article 145
ROYAL ARCH MASONRY. /COMPANION J. HARRIS... Article 145
FREEMASONRY. BROTHER W. POVEY, BOOKBINDE... Article 145
T 1FE ANNUITIES, TO INCREASE THE PRESENT... Article 146
rpi-IE Proprietors ofthe HORTICULTURAL J... Article 146
'T'HE NOBILITY, GENTRY, AMATEURS, and GA... Article 146
DR. OLIVER'S LECTURES ON FREEMASONRY. A ... Article 146
MASONIC LIBRARY, 814, HIGH HOLBORN. BROT... Article 146
IMPORTANT MEDICAL WORKS LATELY PUBLISHED... Article 147
Ctlntcr tj)c lEgjicrial patronage of ?i)... Article 148
Just published, neatly bound, price 4s.,... Article 149
Fifth Edition, Price Ss. TJILES and PROL... Article 149
Just Published, cloth, price 6s. rpHE PH... Article 149
ECCLES ON ULCERS, Third Edition, nearly ... Article 149
BLACKWOOD'S LADY'S MAGAZINE FOB JANUARY,... Article 149
pATENT LEVER "WATCHES, with silver doubl... Article 150
WATCHES, with MASSEY'S PATENT DETACHED L... Article 150
EIGHT DAY CLOCKS, TO STRIKE THE HOURS AN... Article 150
MINTER'S PATENT, SELF-ACTING, RECLINING,... Article 150
ELLIOTT'S POMADE, FOR THE GROWTH AND NOU... Article 150
INDIA. CADET S, Writers, Assistant Surge... Article 151
UNDER THE PATRONAGE OP HIS LATE MAJESTY,... Article 151
Magna est Veritas et - prcevalebit. GALL... Article 152
TO PREVENT FRAUD. THORNE'S POTTED YARMOU... Article 152
A T a time when doubts justly arise resp... Article 152
UNDER THE ESPECIAL PATRONAGE OF HIS MOST... Article 153
SARSAPARILLA. TVjrR. WRAY, of Holborn Hi... Article 153
TO THE NOBILITY, GENTRY, AND FAMILIES FU... Article 153
Untitled Ad 154
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Page 110

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

Scotland.

in the Royal Art , it remains with me now to finish our ivork . " He then gave three knocks on the stone , and said , " May this undertaking be conducted and completed by the Craftsmen according to the Grand Plan , in Peace , Love , and Harmony , "—the music thereafter jilaying " tin , my dear Brethren , " during which the cornucopia and cujis , with the wine and oil , were given to the Sub-Grand Master , the Senior and Junior Grand Wardens . These tbey delivered to the Grand Masterin

, turn , who spread the corn , the wine , and the oil on the stone , and pronounced the G rand Benediction— " May corn , wine , and oil , and all the necessaries of life , abound among men throughout the world , and may the blessing of the Supreme Grand Architect of the Universe be upon this undertaking , and may it be preserved to the latest ages , in order that it may promote the views for which this monument is to be erected . " The band then played the " Mason ' s Anthem , " and the Grand Master

returned to the platform . The music having ceased , The Lord Provost said—Principal Macfarlane and gentlemen , we have performed an act ivhich , while it honours the dead , at the same time honours the living . By erecting a monument to departed genius we leave to our posterity a tangible proof that the generations among whom Sir AValter Scott lived were in so far worth y of him that they could appreciate his merits . AVe have been doing what more perhaps than any other act , helps society forward in the road of social improvement . Every monument erected to a great and good man is an ever fresh moral

lesson to the public . ( Cheers . ) We have been doing what tends to cement society—in all that concerns men—in the matters of public and domestic life—in the certainties of this world and the hopes of the next . ( Loud cheers . ) There are , and in our nature there ever must be , a diversity of opinions and affections . Experience seems to teach that in the society where these are most freely exjiressed—where men most freely emulate each other in endeavours to promote their favourite views

—the greatest discoveries are made , and the greatest actions are performed . But rivalry and emulation alienate men and cultivate the less amiable passions . ( Great ajijilause . ) It is good , therefore , to seize on all those occasions which can re-unite us in that love ivhich is one of the best attributes of our nature ; and what occasion can there be so well fitted for this purpose as when men of every creed and every opinion which divide society , unite in common homage to the memory of some

distinguished fellow-citizen . Their common admiration teaches them that , liowever widel y tbey may differ , tbey still have one common nature , and that their points of resemblance form exactly what is noblest about them . There could not be a mind more admirably constituted for producing this desirable effect than that of the great man whose memory we meet to honour . Those of his works which will live with the nation ' s language are not controversial , stirring up strife ; they are pictures of

life , around which all men gather , to derive enjoyment . Their distinguished features arc the power of noting and exjiressing the peculiarities of character , as well as the fertility of invention . AVe , from whose firesides—from the livina . inmates of whose domestic circles his characters

were drawn—can feel ami attest their identity with nature . AVe have sat at table with—we have shaken hands with—we have quarrelled and been friends with—his Dandie Dinmonts , his Cuddie Headriggs , and last , though not least , his Bailie Nicol Jarvics . There can be no testimony to the truth of his portraits so strong and credible as ours . But . it is from those less familiar with his prototypes that testimony must bo

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