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    Article COMPLIMENTARY DINNER TO BRO. J. L. MATHER, P.A.G.D.C. ← Page 2 of 2
    Article Order of the Secret Monitor. Page 1 of 1
    Article THE POET BURNS. Page 1 of 1
    Article THE POET BURNS. Page 1 of 1
    Article THE POET BURNS. Page 1 of 1
Page 5

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

Complimentary Dinner To Bro. J. L. Mather, P.A.G.D.C.

COMPLIMENTARY DINNER TO BRO . J . L . MATHER , P . A . G . D . C .

The above dinner was given at Ye Cheshire Cheese , Addle-street , City , on Saturday , the 24 th ult ., under the chairmanship of Bro . Frederick Binckes , ably supported by Bros . James Terry , as Vice-Chairman ; Richard Baker , Hon . Sec ; J . Barnett , Hon . Treas . ; and a goodly number of representative brethren .

The toast of " The Queen and Royal Family was proposed by the CHAIRMAN , and warmly responded to by the brethren singing the National Anthem . Thetoastof the evening , "Bro . J . L . Mather , " elicited a very eloquent speech from the CHAIRMAN , expressing the feelings of all present in a most acceptable manner . Bro . 1 . L . MATHER , in a forcible and impressive speech

acknowledged the compliment paid him by so many of his old friends in Masonry . Bro .. WM . ROEBUCK proposed "The Health ofthe Chairman , Bro . Frederick Binckes . Bro . MAPLE proposed " The Health of the Vice-Chairman , " which was responded to by Bro . J AMES T ERRY , in one of his usual pleasant and humorous speeches . The CHAIRMAN then gave the toast , "The Corporation

of the City of London , " acknowledged by Bro . T . H ASTINGS MILLER , C . C . The CHAIRMAN proposed "The Health of the Hon . Treasurer , Bro . J Barnett , and the Hon . Sec , Bro . Richard Baker , " responded to by Bro . J . BARNETT . The pleasure of the evening was added to by the singing of Bros . George Gardner , Barnett , Stephens , and others . The dinner was well served as per the following menu :

Hors d'Oeuvres . Prawns . Salad . Sardines . Soup . Hare . Celery . Fish . Turbot , Hollandaise Sauce . Fried Smelts . Entrees . Ris de Veau a la Jardiniere .

Cutlets of Pigeons , a la Rachel . Removes . Boiled Turkey . Roast Capons . Ox Tongues . York Ham . Chines of Mutton .

Game . Pheasants . Grouse . Sweets . Plum Puddings . Mince Pies . Madeira Jelly . Stewed Pears . Ice Pudding . Dessert .

Order Of The Secret Monitor.

Order of the Secret Monitor .

HORATIO SHIRLEY CONCLAVE ( No . 5 ) . —A meeting of the above conclave was held on Wednesday last , at the Holborn Restaurant . There were present Bros . Horatio Henry Shirley , S . R . ; Dr . Zacharie , G . S . R . ; George Kenning , C . ; E . C . Mulvey , Guide ; Cooper , V . D . ; Weiss , jun ., V . D . ; Read , Guardian ; Major Penrose John Dunbar , Treas . ; Pakes , Sec ; Weiss , sen ., Dr . Goodchild , Scurrah , and others .

The minutes of the last meeting were read and confirmed . Four brethren were inducted into the Order . Bro . George Kenning was elected S . R . ; Bro . Major P . J . Dunbar , Treasurer ; and Bro . Walkley , S ., for the ensuing year . A jewel was voted to the retiring S . R . The brethren afterwards dined together , Bro . H . H . Shirley presiding .

The Poet Burns.

THE POET BURNS .

I have recently read , with much pleasure , the interesting History of the Lodge Canongate Kilwinning , No . 2 , which has fallen from the pen of its much respected Past Master , Bio . Allan Mackenzie . I think undue importance is placed by the worthy author and by the lodge itself on the association which is said to

have existed between it and the Poet Burns . At the time of Poet Burns' first appearance in Edinburgh , the fact of a man in his social position being the author of the poems and songs he had then recently published created much surprise and interest in Edinburgh , and in consequence he was , on this occasion of his first visit , feasted and noticed by many of its leading inhabitants in a way very

gratifying to him . The object of Burns' visit was to secure the publication of a second edition of his works , which the local publisher of the first edition refused to undertake , and he found , through his Masonic privileges , a convenient entre into the society of men of letters and of influence . In the Lodge Canongate Kilwinning , then a rendezvous of the leading Whigs in Scotland , he fortunately

found among its members some country gentlemen from his own locality who showed him special attention and gave him valuable introductions . These attentions conduced to the Poet ' s popularity and to the successful issue of the second edition of his works . In the history of the Lodge Canongate Kilwinning , the Poet is claimed not only as having been elected its first Poet Laureatebut as having held that

, office from 17 S 7 until his death in 1796 . The records of the Lodge which 1 some years ago examined , give no countenance to this assertion , and the woithy author frankl y admits that until 1815 there is no mention in them of such a fact . On the 1 st February , 1787 , Burns was assumed a member of the lodge , but , according to my remembrance , his name does not again appear on the records

of the lodge until 1 S 15 . It is said that on the 1 st March , 178 7 , Burns was "inaugurated , " or , "installed" as Poet Laureate , and that the inauguration was attended by about 60 of the most eminent and best known public and literary men in Scotland , and a picture , painted in 18 4 6 , is referred to as a faithful representation of the inauguration . But it appears to me that had such an event happened

the resolution to confer such an office on the Poet vvould have been minuted . At that date 1 , 0 such office existed , and before it could have been conferred it fell to have been created , which step must have preceded installation into " ¦•It was not until 1815 , 28 years after the alleged occurrence , and 19 years after the Poet ' s death that any Mention is made of the event .

The Poet Burns.

In dealing with this matter , Bro . Mackenzie desires his readers to infer that the minutes record the occurrence , for he states that on 1 st March , 17 S / , the lodge met fur certain purposes , and , among others , for " conferring a tribute of respect on Burns . In the course of the evening the R . W . Master conferred upon him the title of Poet Laureate of the lodge ; " and Bro . Mackenzie mentions the persons

who signed the minute of the meeting . From these statements one would think that the minute referred to instructed the author ' s assertion , particularly , as a reflection is made on Bro . D . Murray Lyon for not noticing it in his wellknown history . But the reason for that omission was , according to my recollection , that the minute is silent on the subject . Many minutes of little interest are quoted at

length in the history , but this minute on which so much is founded , is singularly omitted . On the following page , however , Bro . Mackenzie frankly states that the earliest mention "in the minutes of his ( Burns ) having held the office of Poet Laureate of the lodge is recorded in that of gth February , 1 S 15 ! " He further seeks to support the alleged inauguration by quoting two disjointed portions of

" tattered rhymes , " which , he says , " were written by Burns as a mark of esteem " to Bro . Dunbar , the Senior Warden ofthe lodge ; but in this statement he is , according to Bro . James Marshall , also inaccurate , for Bro . Marshall gives the same rhymes in full , and states that the "tattered rhymes" sent by Burns to Dunbar had not been found . They are not , therefore , the mutilated rhymes quoted in

the History of the Canongate Lodge as the composition . of Burns , and , if the two first lines of the rhymes there quoted , had not been suppressed , the reader would have seen that they referred , not to a Masonic lodge , but to the " Crockallan Crops , " a convivial society , of which Burns and Dunbar were both members . The allegation that Burns was elected Poet Laureate of

the lodge , is further sought to be supported by letters written by Bro . Peacock , the Secretary of the lodge , to Bro . Murray Lyon so recently as 1 S 73 , in consequence of hearing that Bro . Lyon was , in his then forthcoming History of Freemasonry , "to discredit" the fact . The reasons given in these letters amount to little . They are mostly assumed inferences from alleged facts , the accuracy of

which are not known , and are not instructed . The chief reasons founded on are that Bro . Marshall " believed " in the inauguration , that his statement of the occurrence had not until then , 1 S 73 , been questioned , that Bro . McNeill , the Master of the lodge—1830-1837— " had no doubt whatever of the fact , " and that unnamed old members of the lodge "had often borne testimony to their personal

acquaintance with Burns , and to their having been at meetings of the lodge when he was there as Poet Laureate , and that there are members of the lodge at the present time ( 1873 ) who associated tor years with those members who had the privilege of Burns' company in the lodge when he wore the jewel of his office as Poet Laureate , " which " had the name of Robert Burns engraved upon it when the

Poet Laurcateship -mas conferred on him . " It would have been satisfactory had Bro . Peacock given the names of the persons to whom he here refers , and his authority for stating that a jewel was procured and worn by Burns on which his name was engraved at the date he specifies . The lodge records instruct no such putchase or engraving , and , without some satisfactory information , he must excuse

me , in the circumstances , accepting his unsupported statements as conclusive of the facts he sets forth . The persons to whom he refers must , at the time he wrote , have reached a very advanced age , and when the statements are otherwise tested by well established facts , they are rendered most improbable . The installation of Burns took place , it is said , at the lodge ' s last meeting for the

season . He could , as I afterwards show , have at the most attended only the two subsequent monthly meetings of the lodge held in October and November , 17 S 7 . But there is nothing to instruct that he was at these meetings . Where , then , had the persons to whom Bro . Peacock refers the opportunities of associating with Burns , as he asserts ? Certainly not in the Lodge Canongate Kilwinning !

As to the statements of Bro . Marshall on Masonry , many of them are fabulous and incorrect , and are otherwise unreliable . As regards his statement of Burns ' inauguration , it was doubted , on the publication of Bro . Marshall's little work , by at least one of its reviewers . Past Master Alexander McNeill's statement on the subject amounts to little . It simply was that , on being questioned ,

he said he had " no doubt" on the subject . But he gave no grounds for his opinion . Had he known of any , we are entitled to assume that he , an experienced lawyer , would have stated them . But the author of the history of the lodge himself , while he sets forth that Burns held the office of Poet Laureate for nine years , at the same time contradicts in effect that

statement , and says that it was the "title ' only of Poet Laureate , and not that office , which was conferred on the Poet , and was conferred , not by the lodge , but by the Master of the lodge ! In his speech within the lodge at the celebration by it of the Centenary of Burns' alleged installation , Past Master William Nathaniel Fraser , with the apparent concurrence of the lodge , made a similar

statement , and Bro . William Hunter , the Past Master of the Lodge Journeyman , in his lecture on " Burns as a Mason , " said the same thing . Bro . Marshall , also , virtually repeats the statement , for he speaks of Burns being " recognised " and "acknowledged" as the Poet Laureate of the lodge . These statements are inconsistent with the fact of Burns having been elected and installed

into such an office . He could not have been installed into a " title , " and the Master had no right to confer such a "title . " It is unlikely that he would have sought to have conferred , as a "tribute of respect , " an honour so empty —a " title " to an office which had no existence . But until 1835 there was no such office in the Lodge Canongate Kilwinning as that of Poet Laureate .

According to Masonic usage the several offices in the lodge were vacated and re-filled annually . The minutes which bear a record of these annual elections are silent as to Burns and his office . According to them it had no existence 1 In none ot his numerous letters does the Poet refer to such an appointment . He was then in close correspondence with many intimate friends , but neither they nor he

make the slightest allusion to the alleged fact . We are told by some of the reviewers of a "Winter with Burns , " that the circumstance , if it occurred , was " one of the few occasions in which during the Poet ' s lifetime his poetical genius was publicly acknowledged and proclaimed ;" and yet neither he , nor any of his friends , nor any of his biographers , take any notice of such an acknowledgment

The Poet Burns.

The Poet was proud of honours paid him , and toik frequent notice of them . On his visit to the Lodge St . Andrew , Edinburgh , shortly prior to the alleged inauguration , he writes that the toast was given of " Caledonia and Caledonia's Bard , Robert Burns , " and proudly records his gratification at the compliment . In like manner he records his honorary affiliati n a few months later by the Eyemouth

Lodge , but , singularly , neither he , nor the Lodge Canongate Kilwinning , nor any one else , make any contemporaneous record of the great and exceptionable honour said to have been conferred on him by a lodge of foremost distinction , at a special gathering of upwards of sixty of the most distinguished Scotsmen of the age ! The elder Laurie , who must have personally known of the fact had

it occurred , published his History of Freemasonry in Scotland , in 1804 , and his son , the late Grand Secretary of Scotland , publihed his amended History of Freemasonry in 1859 . He became Assistant to his father as the Grand Secretary so long ago as 1831 , and had the fact occurred , he must also have heard and have otherwise known of it . Neither of these leading officials and historians of the Craft

alluded to it ; nor is there any reference to the event in any of thecontemporaneousminutesor proceedings of Grand Lodge nor in those of the sister lodges in Edinburgh , nor in the newspapers , or magazines , or other periodicals of the day . A reviewer of a "Winter with Burns" in 1 S 46 evidently doubted its occurrence , for he describes it as " an event in the Poet's life which is probably not generally known as

having really occurred ! The other business which was transacted by the lodge on the night in question renders it also unlikely that it did occur . According to a " Winter with Burns , " a resolution was that evening carried and an address adopted to the Prince of Wales on becoming a member of the Craft , and two gentlemen were entered apprentices , and i-everal " others who entered as

apprentices at last meeting . were raised to the Degree of Master . " These proceedings must necessarily have occupied considerable time ; and besides , the author indicates that thegenilemen of the lodge had that evening to attend a ball , which " occupied the whole night , " in the newly-erected Assembly Rooms . But Bro . Marshall further states that the Earl of Buchan attended the meeting and wrote a letter to the Poet ,

in which he advised him to visit the battle fields and scenes celebrated in song on the Scottish border , and handed it to him at the meeting . His lordship , there is no doubt , did write such a letter to Burns , and we have thelatter ' s reply , which , however , is dated "February , 1787 , " and which acknowledges Lord Buchan ' s letter , but not as of the ist March ,, but ist February , 1787 . Bro . Marshall is thus

again seen to be inaccurate , and an as experienced Mason he must have known that in the turmoil of such a meeting , the writing of such a letter was unlikely . But assuming that his lordship ' s letter was dated ist March , and was written and handed to the Poet at the alleged inauguration , one vvould have expected to find in the Poet ' s reply some reference to the honour conferred on him on the occasion . But no allusion is made to such an honour or to such a

meeting itself . These circumstances render the alleged gathering and inauguration improbable . But if they did actually occur , why was all notice of them suppressed ? The organisation of such a meeting must have occasioned much trouble and anxiety . The object of it was to confer a signal mark of respect on the Poet , and the greater the publicity given to it so much the more was the object of those interested in it attained .

It is impossible to believe that those convening and carrying through such a demonstration would have purposely supressed all mention of it . But , singularly enough , this is what Bro . Marshall asserts they did . His explanation is that , after consultation with the Grand Secretary and Grand Clerk of the Grand Lodge , the Secretary of the lodge resolved , on their advice , to take no notice of this

great event . Such an explanation casts a flood of ridicule on the whole story . The Master and Wardens and Secretary of the lodge and the Grand Secretary and Grand Clerk were at the time well-known practising lawyers , and would , in the common course of business , have recorded the facts had they occurred . Bro . Marshall further represents Burns as having been

" the life of the lodge , " and it is said , as has been seen , that old members "repeated many reminiscences of the Poet , and events which had occurred in the lodge when there in company with him , " and reference is made to "the seat he always resorted to . " From such and other similar statements the reader would { infer that Burns' connection with the lodge had been long , close , and continuous . But

this was not so . In a " Winter with Burns , " and his correspondence and diaries , his Masonic movements in Edinburgh are closely traced , and from them it is seen that he could have attended , at the most , only three meetings of the Lodge Canongate Kilwinning during the season 1786—87 . He returned to Edinburgh on the second and last occasion of his residence there , on 16 th September , 1787

, and he left it on 18 th February following . Ihere is no record which I can find of his attendance at any Masonic meeting in any lodge during that period , and he certainly nowhere makes reference to any . Shortly after his second return to Edinburgh , he sustained a severe injury to one of his knees , which , he states in a letter , dated January 21 st , 1788 , had confined him to his room " for six horrible weeks

—anguish and low spirits had made me unfit to read , write , or think ; " and , he added , that as soon as he could bear the journey he would leave Edinburgh . In another letter , dated 14 th February , 1788 , he said that he had been ill nearly three months , " though he was getting vastly better . "

On the iSth February , 1788 , he was able to leave Edinburgh and return to Ayrshire . The monthly meetings of the lodge commenced for the season yearly in October , and terminated in March . He thus during the Masonic season of 1787—SS could not have attended more than two such meetings , if he attended any .

As regards the picture of the alleged " inauguration , " it is purely imaginary , and is , in fact , a mere collection of the portraits of eminent friendly contemporaries of the Poet scattered throughout the country , and assumed by the artist to have been present on the occasion . Bro . Marshall , on whose suggestion the painting was executed , places it no

higher ; indeed , several of the persons whose portraits figure in the picture as present at the ceremonial , clothed as Freemasons in Masonic paraphernalia , were admittedly not members of the Order , and some are represented as present who had ceased to reside in Scotland or near Edinburgh . —Yours fraternally , WILLIAM OFFICER , Past G . D . ot Scotland , Edinburgh , November 14 th ,

“The Freemason: 1888-12-01, Page 5” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 27 July 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fvl/issues/fvl_01121888/page/5/.
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CONTENTS. Article 1
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ANOTHER MASONIC MS. Article 2
ROLL OF GRAND MASTERS OF IRELAND. Article 2
UNITED GRAND LODGE OF ENGLAND. Article 2
PROVINCIAL GRAND CHAPTER OF ESSEX. Article 3
PROVINCIAL GRAND CHAPTER OF WEST YORKSHIRE. Article 3
PROVINCIAL GRAND CHAPTER OF OXFORDSHIRE. Article 4
PROVINCIAL GRAND LODGE, COUNTY DOWN, IRELAND. Article 4
Order of the Secret Monitor. Article 5
THE POET BURNS. Article 5
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To Correspondents. Article 7
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Original Correspondence. Article 8
Masonic Notes and Queries: Article 8
Reports of Masonic Meetings. Article 8
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INSTRUCTION. Article 12
Royal Arch. Article 12
INSTRUCTION. Article 13
Mark Masonry. Article 13
Knights Templar. Article 13
MASONIC AND GENERAL TIDINGS Article 14
METROPOLITAN MASONIC MEETINGS Article 15
PROVINCIAL MASONIC MEETINGS Article 15
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Complimentary Dinner To Bro. J. L. Mather, P.A.G.D.C.

COMPLIMENTARY DINNER TO BRO . J . L . MATHER , P . A . G . D . C .

The above dinner was given at Ye Cheshire Cheese , Addle-street , City , on Saturday , the 24 th ult ., under the chairmanship of Bro . Frederick Binckes , ably supported by Bros . James Terry , as Vice-Chairman ; Richard Baker , Hon . Sec ; J . Barnett , Hon . Treas . ; and a goodly number of representative brethren .

The toast of " The Queen and Royal Family was proposed by the CHAIRMAN , and warmly responded to by the brethren singing the National Anthem . Thetoastof the evening , "Bro . J . L . Mather , " elicited a very eloquent speech from the CHAIRMAN , expressing the feelings of all present in a most acceptable manner . Bro . 1 . L . MATHER , in a forcible and impressive speech

acknowledged the compliment paid him by so many of his old friends in Masonry . Bro .. WM . ROEBUCK proposed "The Health ofthe Chairman , Bro . Frederick Binckes . Bro . MAPLE proposed " The Health of the Vice-Chairman , " which was responded to by Bro . J AMES T ERRY , in one of his usual pleasant and humorous speeches . The CHAIRMAN then gave the toast , "The Corporation

of the City of London , " acknowledged by Bro . T . H ASTINGS MILLER , C . C . The CHAIRMAN proposed "The Health of the Hon . Treasurer , Bro . J Barnett , and the Hon . Sec , Bro . Richard Baker , " responded to by Bro . J . BARNETT . The pleasure of the evening was added to by the singing of Bros . George Gardner , Barnett , Stephens , and others . The dinner was well served as per the following menu :

Hors d'Oeuvres . Prawns . Salad . Sardines . Soup . Hare . Celery . Fish . Turbot , Hollandaise Sauce . Fried Smelts . Entrees . Ris de Veau a la Jardiniere .

Cutlets of Pigeons , a la Rachel . Removes . Boiled Turkey . Roast Capons . Ox Tongues . York Ham . Chines of Mutton .

Game . Pheasants . Grouse . Sweets . Plum Puddings . Mince Pies . Madeira Jelly . Stewed Pears . Ice Pudding . Dessert .

Order Of The Secret Monitor.

Order of the Secret Monitor .

HORATIO SHIRLEY CONCLAVE ( No . 5 ) . —A meeting of the above conclave was held on Wednesday last , at the Holborn Restaurant . There were present Bros . Horatio Henry Shirley , S . R . ; Dr . Zacharie , G . S . R . ; George Kenning , C . ; E . C . Mulvey , Guide ; Cooper , V . D . ; Weiss , jun ., V . D . ; Read , Guardian ; Major Penrose John Dunbar , Treas . ; Pakes , Sec ; Weiss , sen ., Dr . Goodchild , Scurrah , and others .

The minutes of the last meeting were read and confirmed . Four brethren were inducted into the Order . Bro . George Kenning was elected S . R . ; Bro . Major P . J . Dunbar , Treasurer ; and Bro . Walkley , S ., for the ensuing year . A jewel was voted to the retiring S . R . The brethren afterwards dined together , Bro . H . H . Shirley presiding .

The Poet Burns.

THE POET BURNS .

I have recently read , with much pleasure , the interesting History of the Lodge Canongate Kilwinning , No . 2 , which has fallen from the pen of its much respected Past Master , Bio . Allan Mackenzie . I think undue importance is placed by the worthy author and by the lodge itself on the association which is said to

have existed between it and the Poet Burns . At the time of Poet Burns' first appearance in Edinburgh , the fact of a man in his social position being the author of the poems and songs he had then recently published created much surprise and interest in Edinburgh , and in consequence he was , on this occasion of his first visit , feasted and noticed by many of its leading inhabitants in a way very

gratifying to him . The object of Burns' visit was to secure the publication of a second edition of his works , which the local publisher of the first edition refused to undertake , and he found , through his Masonic privileges , a convenient entre into the society of men of letters and of influence . In the Lodge Canongate Kilwinning , then a rendezvous of the leading Whigs in Scotland , he fortunately

found among its members some country gentlemen from his own locality who showed him special attention and gave him valuable introductions . These attentions conduced to the Poet ' s popularity and to the successful issue of the second edition of his works . In the history of the Lodge Canongate Kilwinning , the Poet is claimed not only as having been elected its first Poet Laureatebut as having held that

, office from 17 S 7 until his death in 1796 . The records of the Lodge which 1 some years ago examined , give no countenance to this assertion , and the woithy author frankl y admits that until 1815 there is no mention in them of such a fact . On the 1 st February , 1787 , Burns was assumed a member of the lodge , but , according to my remembrance , his name does not again appear on the records

of the lodge until 1 S 15 . It is said that on the 1 st March , 178 7 , Burns was "inaugurated , " or , "installed" as Poet Laureate , and that the inauguration was attended by about 60 of the most eminent and best known public and literary men in Scotland , and a picture , painted in 18 4 6 , is referred to as a faithful representation of the inauguration . But it appears to me that had such an event happened

the resolution to confer such an office on the Poet vvould have been minuted . At that date 1 , 0 such office existed , and before it could have been conferred it fell to have been created , which step must have preceded installation into " ¦•It was not until 1815 , 28 years after the alleged occurrence , and 19 years after the Poet ' s death that any Mention is made of the event .

The Poet Burns.

In dealing with this matter , Bro . Mackenzie desires his readers to infer that the minutes record the occurrence , for he states that on 1 st March , 17 S / , the lodge met fur certain purposes , and , among others , for " conferring a tribute of respect on Burns . In the course of the evening the R . W . Master conferred upon him the title of Poet Laureate of the lodge ; " and Bro . Mackenzie mentions the persons

who signed the minute of the meeting . From these statements one would think that the minute referred to instructed the author ' s assertion , particularly , as a reflection is made on Bro . D . Murray Lyon for not noticing it in his wellknown history . But the reason for that omission was , according to my recollection , that the minute is silent on the subject . Many minutes of little interest are quoted at

length in the history , but this minute on which so much is founded , is singularly omitted . On the following page , however , Bro . Mackenzie frankly states that the earliest mention "in the minutes of his ( Burns ) having held the office of Poet Laureate of the lodge is recorded in that of gth February , 1 S 15 ! " He further seeks to support the alleged inauguration by quoting two disjointed portions of

" tattered rhymes , " which , he says , " were written by Burns as a mark of esteem " to Bro . Dunbar , the Senior Warden ofthe lodge ; but in this statement he is , according to Bro . James Marshall , also inaccurate , for Bro . Marshall gives the same rhymes in full , and states that the "tattered rhymes" sent by Burns to Dunbar had not been found . They are not , therefore , the mutilated rhymes quoted in

the History of the Canongate Lodge as the composition . of Burns , and , if the two first lines of the rhymes there quoted , had not been suppressed , the reader would have seen that they referred , not to a Masonic lodge , but to the " Crockallan Crops , " a convivial society , of which Burns and Dunbar were both members . The allegation that Burns was elected Poet Laureate of

the lodge , is further sought to be supported by letters written by Bro . Peacock , the Secretary of the lodge , to Bro . Murray Lyon so recently as 1 S 73 , in consequence of hearing that Bro . Lyon was , in his then forthcoming History of Freemasonry , "to discredit" the fact . The reasons given in these letters amount to little . They are mostly assumed inferences from alleged facts , the accuracy of

which are not known , and are not instructed . The chief reasons founded on are that Bro . Marshall " believed " in the inauguration , that his statement of the occurrence had not until then , 1 S 73 , been questioned , that Bro . McNeill , the Master of the lodge—1830-1837— " had no doubt whatever of the fact , " and that unnamed old members of the lodge "had often borne testimony to their personal

acquaintance with Burns , and to their having been at meetings of the lodge when he was there as Poet Laureate , and that there are members of the lodge at the present time ( 1873 ) who associated tor years with those members who had the privilege of Burns' company in the lodge when he wore the jewel of his office as Poet Laureate , " which " had the name of Robert Burns engraved upon it when the

Poet Laurcateship -mas conferred on him . " It would have been satisfactory had Bro . Peacock given the names of the persons to whom he here refers , and his authority for stating that a jewel was procured and worn by Burns on which his name was engraved at the date he specifies . The lodge records instruct no such putchase or engraving , and , without some satisfactory information , he must excuse

me , in the circumstances , accepting his unsupported statements as conclusive of the facts he sets forth . The persons to whom he refers must , at the time he wrote , have reached a very advanced age , and when the statements are otherwise tested by well established facts , they are rendered most improbable . The installation of Burns took place , it is said , at the lodge ' s last meeting for the

season . He could , as I afterwards show , have at the most attended only the two subsequent monthly meetings of the lodge held in October and November , 17 S 7 . But there is nothing to instruct that he was at these meetings . Where , then , had the persons to whom Bro . Peacock refers the opportunities of associating with Burns , as he asserts ? Certainly not in the Lodge Canongate Kilwinning !

As to the statements of Bro . Marshall on Masonry , many of them are fabulous and incorrect , and are otherwise unreliable . As regards his statement of Burns ' inauguration , it was doubted , on the publication of Bro . Marshall's little work , by at least one of its reviewers . Past Master Alexander McNeill's statement on the subject amounts to little . It simply was that , on being questioned ,

he said he had " no doubt" on the subject . But he gave no grounds for his opinion . Had he known of any , we are entitled to assume that he , an experienced lawyer , would have stated them . But the author of the history of the lodge himself , while he sets forth that Burns held the office of Poet Laureate for nine years , at the same time contradicts in effect that

statement , and says that it was the "title ' only of Poet Laureate , and not that office , which was conferred on the Poet , and was conferred , not by the lodge , but by the Master of the lodge ! In his speech within the lodge at the celebration by it of the Centenary of Burns' alleged installation , Past Master William Nathaniel Fraser , with the apparent concurrence of the lodge , made a similar

statement , and Bro . William Hunter , the Past Master of the Lodge Journeyman , in his lecture on " Burns as a Mason , " said the same thing . Bro . Marshall , also , virtually repeats the statement , for he speaks of Burns being " recognised " and "acknowledged" as the Poet Laureate of the lodge . These statements are inconsistent with the fact of Burns having been elected and installed

into such an office . He could not have been installed into a " title , " and the Master had no right to confer such a "title . " It is unlikely that he would have sought to have conferred , as a "tribute of respect , " an honour so empty —a " title " to an office which had no existence . But until 1835 there was no such office in the Lodge Canongate Kilwinning as that of Poet Laureate .

According to Masonic usage the several offices in the lodge were vacated and re-filled annually . The minutes which bear a record of these annual elections are silent as to Burns and his office . According to them it had no existence 1 In none ot his numerous letters does the Poet refer to such an appointment . He was then in close correspondence with many intimate friends , but neither they nor he

make the slightest allusion to the alleged fact . We are told by some of the reviewers of a "Winter with Burns , " that the circumstance , if it occurred , was " one of the few occasions in which during the Poet ' s lifetime his poetical genius was publicly acknowledged and proclaimed ;" and yet neither he , nor any of his friends , nor any of his biographers , take any notice of such an acknowledgment

The Poet Burns.

The Poet was proud of honours paid him , and toik frequent notice of them . On his visit to the Lodge St . Andrew , Edinburgh , shortly prior to the alleged inauguration , he writes that the toast was given of " Caledonia and Caledonia's Bard , Robert Burns , " and proudly records his gratification at the compliment . In like manner he records his honorary affiliati n a few months later by the Eyemouth

Lodge , but , singularly , neither he , nor the Lodge Canongate Kilwinning , nor any one else , make any contemporaneous record of the great and exceptionable honour said to have been conferred on him by a lodge of foremost distinction , at a special gathering of upwards of sixty of the most distinguished Scotsmen of the age ! The elder Laurie , who must have personally known of the fact had

it occurred , published his History of Freemasonry in Scotland , in 1804 , and his son , the late Grand Secretary of Scotland , publihed his amended History of Freemasonry in 1859 . He became Assistant to his father as the Grand Secretary so long ago as 1831 , and had the fact occurred , he must also have heard and have otherwise known of it . Neither of these leading officials and historians of the Craft

alluded to it ; nor is there any reference to the event in any of thecontemporaneousminutesor proceedings of Grand Lodge nor in those of the sister lodges in Edinburgh , nor in the newspapers , or magazines , or other periodicals of the day . A reviewer of a "Winter with Burns" in 1 S 46 evidently doubted its occurrence , for he describes it as " an event in the Poet's life which is probably not generally known as

having really occurred ! The other business which was transacted by the lodge on the night in question renders it also unlikely that it did occur . According to a " Winter with Burns , " a resolution was that evening carried and an address adopted to the Prince of Wales on becoming a member of the Craft , and two gentlemen were entered apprentices , and i-everal " others who entered as

apprentices at last meeting . were raised to the Degree of Master . " These proceedings must necessarily have occupied considerable time ; and besides , the author indicates that thegenilemen of the lodge had that evening to attend a ball , which " occupied the whole night , " in the newly-erected Assembly Rooms . But Bro . Marshall further states that the Earl of Buchan attended the meeting and wrote a letter to the Poet ,

in which he advised him to visit the battle fields and scenes celebrated in song on the Scottish border , and handed it to him at the meeting . His lordship , there is no doubt , did write such a letter to Burns , and we have thelatter ' s reply , which , however , is dated "February , 1787 , " and which acknowledges Lord Buchan ' s letter , but not as of the ist March ,, but ist February , 1787 . Bro . Marshall is thus

again seen to be inaccurate , and an as experienced Mason he must have known that in the turmoil of such a meeting , the writing of such a letter was unlikely . But assuming that his lordship ' s letter was dated ist March , and was written and handed to the Poet at the alleged inauguration , one vvould have expected to find in the Poet ' s reply some reference to the honour conferred on him on the occasion . But no allusion is made to such an honour or to such a

meeting itself . These circumstances render the alleged gathering and inauguration improbable . But if they did actually occur , why was all notice of them suppressed ? The organisation of such a meeting must have occasioned much trouble and anxiety . The object of it was to confer a signal mark of respect on the Poet , and the greater the publicity given to it so much the more was the object of those interested in it attained .

It is impossible to believe that those convening and carrying through such a demonstration would have purposely supressed all mention of it . But , singularly enough , this is what Bro . Marshall asserts they did . His explanation is that , after consultation with the Grand Secretary and Grand Clerk of the Grand Lodge , the Secretary of the lodge resolved , on their advice , to take no notice of this

great event . Such an explanation casts a flood of ridicule on the whole story . The Master and Wardens and Secretary of the lodge and the Grand Secretary and Grand Clerk were at the time well-known practising lawyers , and would , in the common course of business , have recorded the facts had they occurred . Bro . Marshall further represents Burns as having been

" the life of the lodge , " and it is said , as has been seen , that old members "repeated many reminiscences of the Poet , and events which had occurred in the lodge when there in company with him , " and reference is made to "the seat he always resorted to . " From such and other similar statements the reader would { infer that Burns' connection with the lodge had been long , close , and continuous . But

this was not so . In a " Winter with Burns , " and his correspondence and diaries , his Masonic movements in Edinburgh are closely traced , and from them it is seen that he could have attended , at the most , only three meetings of the Lodge Canongate Kilwinning during the season 1786—87 . He returned to Edinburgh on the second and last occasion of his residence there , on 16 th September , 1787

, and he left it on 18 th February following . Ihere is no record which I can find of his attendance at any Masonic meeting in any lodge during that period , and he certainly nowhere makes reference to any . Shortly after his second return to Edinburgh , he sustained a severe injury to one of his knees , which , he states in a letter , dated January 21 st , 1788 , had confined him to his room " for six horrible weeks

—anguish and low spirits had made me unfit to read , write , or think ; " and , he added , that as soon as he could bear the journey he would leave Edinburgh . In another letter , dated 14 th February , 1788 , he said that he had been ill nearly three months , " though he was getting vastly better . "

On the iSth February , 1788 , he was able to leave Edinburgh and return to Ayrshire . The monthly meetings of the lodge commenced for the season yearly in October , and terminated in March . He thus during the Masonic season of 1787—SS could not have attended more than two such meetings , if he attended any .

As regards the picture of the alleged " inauguration , " it is purely imaginary , and is , in fact , a mere collection of the portraits of eminent friendly contemporaries of the Poet scattered throughout the country , and assumed by the artist to have been present on the occasion . Bro . Marshall , on whose suggestion the painting was executed , places it no

higher ; indeed , several of the persons whose portraits figure in the picture as present at the ceremonial , clothed as Freemasons in Masonic paraphernalia , were admittedly not members of the Order , and some are represented as present who had ceased to reside in Scotland or near Edinburgh . —Yours fraternally , WILLIAM OFFICER , Past G . D . ot Scotland , Edinburgh , November 14 th ,

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