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    Article WAKEFIELD MASONIC LITERARY SOCIETY. Page 1 of 2
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Wakefield Masonic Literary Society.

WAKEFIELD MASONIC LITERARY SOCIETY .

ADDRESS BY THE DEAN OF YORK .

A large and influential gathering' of the members of thc Wakefield Masonic Literary Society , together with numerous brethren from thc neighbouring towns , met at the Masonic Hall , Zetland-street , Wakefield , on Thursday , the 5 th instant . The occasion was an interesting one . The Very Rev . A . P . Purey-Cust , D . D ., Dean of York , hacl kindl y consented , at the invitation of the President of the Society , the Prov . Grand Master of West

Yorkshire , to g ive an address to the members . A special lodge of emergency was called under the united banners of the three lodges of the city at seven p . m ., and upwards of 60 brethren responded tothe call . Bro . Walter Fennell , W . M . 154 , as Master of the premier Wakefield lodge , occupied the chair of K . S . He was supported by the W . M . ' s of 495 and 1019 , thc minor posts being filled b y Wardens or Past Masters of position and standing .

At 7 . 30 prompt thc Deputy Prov . Grand Master , Bro . Henry Smith , was announced . With him came the guest of the evening-, Bro . the Very Rev . A . P . Purey-Cust , D . D ., Dean of York , P . M . 2328 , and Past Grand Chaplain of England . They were preceded by a considerable number of Present and Past Provincial Grand Officers , and when all had taken their places the lodge room presented a most animated and brilliant appearance .

The D . P . G . M ., on rising , said : Brethren , in the unfortunate absence of our P . G . M ., I , as a Vice-President of this Society , am called upon to take the chair this evening , and we will , with your permission , at once proceed to business . I , therefore , call upon the Secretaries to read the minutes of our last meeting .

This was done b y Bro . H . S . CHILDE , W . M . elect 154 , and the minutes being put and passed , The Prov . Grand Master , Bro . T . W . Tew , J . P ., wrote as follows :

The Grange , Carleton , Pontefract , 5 th November , 1891 . Dear Bro . Matthewman , It is a privilege of which the members of the Wakefield Masonic Literary Society may justly be proud , to have it in their power to welcome , under the united banners of their three lodges , the eminent archaeologist and learned author of that admirable work— " The Heraldry of York Minster . "

To-night , I believe , it is the purpose of the Very Rev . Dean to take up Freemasonry philosophically , and to give you his views and matured opinions upon the Craft—past , present , and future . It is needless to say that I commend the address to which you are about to listen to the earnest attention of all , feeling sure that the author of the work on that grand old edifice which every Yorkshireman reveres as a mighty effort of mediaeval art , will enrich your minds and rouse your enthusiasm for the noble principles of the Craft of which we are all devoted members .

Addresses of this character your Prov . Grand Master has always been most anxious to promote in the 42 towns of the riding over which his jurisdiction extends . It delights me to see that the Wakefield Masons have taken the initiative this winter in promulgating Masonic literature , and that they are so fortunate as to be able to introduce so learned a lecturer to encourage them in the pursuit of Masonic knowledge .

To Dr . Purey-Cust I beg to express my gratitude for his readiness in accepting my invitation as President of this Society , and I trust he will return to York satisfied that there is a great desire on the part of his brethren in this portion of the county diligently to pursue the search after truth . It is a great grief to me , dear Bro . Matthewman , that the G . A . O . T . U . has so afflicted me that I am unable to join in rendering personal homage to the Dean , or to take any part in your proceedings , beyond the expression of this sympathetic and fervent desire for their success .

Please tender my sincere obligation to the lecturer for the compliment he has paid the Society in coming to Wakefield to-night , and assure him that we shall look back upon this meeting as one of the most brilliant and fortunate of our Literary Society gatherings . —With my regards and esteem for your co-Secretary , Bro . Childe , and yourself , I am , fraternall y yours , ( Signed ) THOS . WM . TEW , President .

Bro . HENRY SMITH then in graceful terms introduced thc lecturer , and commended him to the brethren present as an archicologist , a scholar , a divine , and a Freemason , a brother whose reputation had extended far beyond the diocese from which he derived his antient title , and one who he felt sure would interest , instruct , and enlighten them . He prayed their silence and attention for Dr . Purey-Cust .

After paying a ver ) ' high compliment to Bro . Tew , and expressing his great regret that hc was unable to have the pleasure of meeting him on this most interesting occasion , ancl venturing to hope that many years of usefulness were yet in the future- for the Prov . Grand Master of West Yorkshire , thc learned Dean commenced his address . He said :

I believe I may venture to assert that I am one of the oldest Freemasons in this assembly . Initiated in 18 47 , I have been a member of the Craft for nearl y half a century . I do not , however , profess to be so well versed in Masonic ceremonial as many whom I see around me . I have , some will say , as it were , halted on the threshold , for I have never risen to a Degree higher than that of a M . M ., yet it satisfies me , and I have no ambition to go beyond it , for in the M . M . ' s Degree

you attain to that which is the peculiar province of Freemasonry—viz ., full participation in that wonderful fellowship with " all sorts and conditions of men " which , as far as I know , has never been achieved , or even attempted , by any other body corporate . The title of my address— "Freemasonry ; Past , Present , and Future " —is a somewhat ambitious one , and perhaps even alarming , but I am not going to carry you back to the distant past , I leave that to the Masonic arcb . eologist of the

day ; I shall travel backwards onl y for a period of 50 years . And it may interest the brethren to know in what aspect Freemasonry presented itself to me at that time , and what were the inducemenls which led me to join it . At that period of my life I was an Undergraduate at Oxford . Oxford was then a little known city ; people knew scarcel y anything , and cared perhaps less , as to what took place there . It was difficult of access . The authorities , in their vvisdom , thought railways

detrimental to the moral or social health of the youths who frequented its timehonoured colleges . Those young men were left pretty much to their own guidance , and throughout the whole three years of my Undergraduate life I do not remember to have received one serious word of counsel or advice from any of those under whose authority vve were placed . The examples set bv the Dons were not encouraging , the orgies of the Common room vvere notorious , and my own tutor vvas at once brilliant , learned , and intemperate . At that time there

were two Masonic lodges in Oxford—the Apollo , confined to University men , and the Alfred , for the people of the town and neighbourhood . In the society of Masons 1 found what elsewhere Oxford did not afford . I found good fellowship and social intercourse , based n . t upon mere jovial and often excessive eating and drinking , but upon refined and intelligent society , scrupulously combined with the strictest temperance . In my lodge I found conversation of a highly rational character , the opportunity of meeting men more or less distinguished in various walks in life , musicians like Stephen Elvey , for instance , and with all this charming

Wakefield Masonic Literary Society.

talk and jest there was nothing to offend . One felt at once it was a beneficent movement , and I was drawn towards it , for within it I found not only pleasant intercourse but also safety . And this , brethren , is no fanciful retrospect , as I will show you . In those days , at 9 . 15 p . m ., " Great Tom " of Christ Church pealed forth its tones in token that the peace and good order of the city were handed over to the University authorities . The police were practically deposed , and the

Proctors , with theirmyrmidons—nicknamed bull-dogs—reigned in theirstead . Their duties were to protect the streets , maintain order , arrest offenders , and to stop any Undergraduates whom they might meet , ask their name and college , and require an explanation as from whence they were coming and whither they were going . To declare yourself a Mason , and to say that you were returning from the Apollo was a passport at once ; •no further question was asked , the excellent

character of the lodge was so well known and acknowledged . This gave people a high opinion of Freemasonry , and I should like that view of it to stand . But what wonderful development since ! At that time it was no doubt substantial in strength and under distinguished patronage , for it vvas presided over by a Royal Prince , the late Duke of Sussex . But what is it now ? I do not profess to know what its numbers may be , and we have been told that " there is nothing more

fallacious than facts , except figures , " but its membership is rapidly increasing ; we are adding lodge after lodge to our roll ; it embraces all classes of society , except perhaps the labouring class , and as old faces disappear , new men it is gratifying to see come forward to supply their places . As an instance , take my own county , Lincolnshire . Its affairs have been admirably administered , and now I am glad to say that one of the latest recruits to our ranks is the young Lord Yarborough , a popular

man , with large landed interest and influence both here and in the West Riding of Yorkshire , one who will make an excellent Mason and will , at no distant date , I have no doubt , take high Masonic rank . He will shortly be " raised '' at Lincoln . In addition to this wonderful numerical increase , our Society , I believe , has improved its position in the public regard . In many places , some years ago , a Mason was looked upon as an objectionable , self-indulgent creature , if he were not something

worse , whilst in certain classes of society on the continent he is regarded , even now , as little short of a monster . My friend , the Dean of Lincoln , who is a great traveller but is not a Freemason , was telling me only the other day of a conversation he had held with a French Abbe on this point . Bewailing the unsettled condition of society the French Priest laid all the blame on the Freemasons . It was they , he declared , who caused and carried out the horrors of the French Revolution ,

they who upset thrones and destroyed dynasties , they who formed secret associations for all kinds of iniquity , they , in fact , who would overthrow all law and order and substititute no one knew what . They were Republicans , Socialists , and unbelievers , and every thing should be done to destroy their pernicious influence and to root them out from society . When assured by my friend that in England they were the very opposite of all this , that , they were loyal , patriotic , and

charitable , and that every movement for the public good was invariably supported by the Freemasons , the surprise of the FYenchman vvas extreme . The Dean of Lincoln , though no Mason , could yet testify that we vvere a steady , respectable body of men , who certainly did no harm and very likely much good . I am strong in the belief that so far from our Brotherhood exercising a disturbing influence , it has on the contrary done more to bring men together , promote good feeling , and

enlist human sympathy than any other institution that could be named . As to the future , I believe that as it is no effete survival of the past , so will it make its influence continue to be felt , and that as time goes on , by means of its three great and eternal principles , it will help to keep alive the idea that we are all one brotherhood , that we need sympathy and support , and do much to promote a genuine feeling of confidence amongst all classes and all nations . In former

days its great work was to make men known to each other vvho did not know and could not know much of each other . Its special . work seems now to be to mitigate and dissipate , by mutual intercourse and fellowship , those fallacious and mischievous misrepresentations which are tending to set class against class , and to promote " envy , hatred , malice , and all uncharitableness" broadcast through the world in the columns of the so-called " society papers , " the great curse of the

present day . Those papers live on gossip , speculation , and untruth , often I fear intentional untruth . Take an instance : ex into disce omnes . It has been lately reported by one of them that my predecessor , during the 20 years that he held the Deanery , had amassed and did actually leave behind him half a million of money . Now all those who knew the late Dean of York also knew that whatever he left at his death he had inherited from his father , and that so far from

obtaining personal wealth from his position in the Church , he spent every penny that Church supplied to him and more , on religious and charitable objects . Thus an attempt is made to set the masses against the classes , thus a good and kind-hearted man is grossly maligned . Now , I think that Freemasonry is invaluable as a countercheck for this sort of thing . Men learn to know each other , not as these papers would have us , but by mutual

intercourse , and thus a kindly feeling is generated and spread through society . The tone of a well conducted lodge , if lived up to , raises a man above this petty spite , and teaches him to look upon his fellow man with consideration and charity . Brethren , we have a great responsibility , we inherit a high prestige , we have a grand opportunity for the future , what shall vve make of it ? Onl y let us keep steadfastly to uur principles , and I have no fear of the result . Let us bring our

Freemasonry as it were up to date , let us make it a great beneficial power amongst us , let us remember that its key-note is unselfishness , tnat it is embodied philanthropy , and that the benefit of humanity and the general good of society are comprehended within its tenets . Again , let us watch well our conduct . We live as it vvere " in a city set on a hill , " the eyes of a watchful world are upon us , both as individuals and in bodies . We must , to some extent , satisfy the world at large , we must disabuse

their minds . We know that our frugal repasts are by no means what the world understands by " banquets " though otten so styled •> wecling to that archaic expression , but it will be well for us to make it , and let the world know that it is , a frugal meal . We must remove any cause ' of misrepresentation , and prevent any blemish falling on our Craft . In conclusion , very much depends upon us as individuals ; it is no use making professions unless we carry them out . Moreover , in adding

to our number , vve must try to get the right men , not men of any special grade ; men vvith right motives , wno will understand and appreciate our oojects . Freemasonry has great power for good : 1 have myself repeatedly experienced it . The right hand of fellowship has avec been extended t _ i me , and at no time more than when I first c _ une into Yorkshire a ; id tnus the practical principles of the Craft

have been put into operation on my behalt . In carrying out tne wishes of your esteemed Prov . Grand Master in addressing you this evening I have given you my personal experiences of the past , the actual condition of the present , and my own ideas as to wnat the future ought to be . I trust , brethren , you will throw yourselves heartily and thoroughly with me into this great matter , and will strive to the utmost to further the views which I have endeavoured to put before you .

At the close of the address , which was most cordiall y received , Bro . VV . I ' ESSELL proposed a hearty vote of thanks to the Dean . This was seconded b y Bro . IT . FRANCE , and supported by Bros . M . B . Hick , Major Bolton , and the Rev . H . L . Clarke , and carried with acclamation . The Very Rev . LECTURER / rising to reply , was very warmly greeted .

He said it was a great pleasure to him to come at the request ot his good friend , Bro . Tew , and address a few words to the Masons of Wakefield . That he hig hly valued and appreciated the privilege of belonging to the Craft , and that so long as Freemasonry continued to be as he had found s , ever striving to do good , aiming at a high and noble ideal , he should rejoice to be numbered amongst its members . He thanked the Deputy and every brother present for the exceeding kindness they had shown to him , ana

“The Freemason: 1891-11-21, Page 2” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 2 Aug. 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fvl/issues/fvl_21111891/page/2/.
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Title Category Page
PROVINCIAL HONOURS. Article 1
WAKEFIELD MASONIC LITERARY SOCIETY. Article 2
PROVINCIAL GRAND LODGE OF DORSETSHIRE. Article 3
PROVINCIAL GRAND MARK LODGE OF KENT. Article 3
PROVINCIAL GRAND MARK LODGE OF WEST YORKSHIRE. Article 3
Untitled Ad 4
Untitled Ad 4
Untitled Ad 4
Untitled Ad 4
Untitled Ad 4
Untitled Ad 4
Untitled Ad 4
Untitled Ad 4
Untitled Ad 4
Untitled Ad 4
Untitled Ad 4
Untitled Ad 4
Untitled Ad 4
Untitled Ad 4
Untitled Ad 4
To Correspondents. Article 4
Untitled Article 4
Masonic Notes. Article 4
Correspondence. Article 5
Masonic Notes and Queries. Article 5
REPORTS OF MASONIC MEETINGS. Article 5
Royal Arch. Article 9
Lodges and Chapters of Instruction. Article 9
Ancient and Accepted Rite. Article 10
Order of the Secret Monitor. Article 10
BOARD OF BENEVOLENCE. Article 10
MARRIAGE OF MISS MATTHEWS. Article 11
THE THEATRES. Article 11
Obituary. Article 11
Untitled Ad 11
MASONIC AND GENERAL TIDINGS Article 12
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Wakefield Masonic Literary Society.

WAKEFIELD MASONIC LITERARY SOCIETY .

ADDRESS BY THE DEAN OF YORK .

A large and influential gathering' of the members of thc Wakefield Masonic Literary Society , together with numerous brethren from thc neighbouring towns , met at the Masonic Hall , Zetland-street , Wakefield , on Thursday , the 5 th instant . The occasion was an interesting one . The Very Rev . A . P . Purey-Cust , D . D ., Dean of York , hacl kindl y consented , at the invitation of the President of the Society , the Prov . Grand Master of West

Yorkshire , to g ive an address to the members . A special lodge of emergency was called under the united banners of the three lodges of the city at seven p . m ., and upwards of 60 brethren responded tothe call . Bro . Walter Fennell , W . M . 154 , as Master of the premier Wakefield lodge , occupied the chair of K . S . He was supported by the W . M . ' s of 495 and 1019 , thc minor posts being filled b y Wardens or Past Masters of position and standing .

At 7 . 30 prompt thc Deputy Prov . Grand Master , Bro . Henry Smith , was announced . With him came the guest of the evening-, Bro . the Very Rev . A . P . Purey-Cust , D . D ., Dean of York , P . M . 2328 , and Past Grand Chaplain of England . They were preceded by a considerable number of Present and Past Provincial Grand Officers , and when all had taken their places the lodge room presented a most animated and brilliant appearance .

The D . P . G . M ., on rising , said : Brethren , in the unfortunate absence of our P . G . M ., I , as a Vice-President of this Society , am called upon to take the chair this evening , and we will , with your permission , at once proceed to business . I , therefore , call upon the Secretaries to read the minutes of our last meeting .

This was done b y Bro . H . S . CHILDE , W . M . elect 154 , and the minutes being put and passed , The Prov . Grand Master , Bro . T . W . Tew , J . P ., wrote as follows :

The Grange , Carleton , Pontefract , 5 th November , 1891 . Dear Bro . Matthewman , It is a privilege of which the members of the Wakefield Masonic Literary Society may justly be proud , to have it in their power to welcome , under the united banners of their three lodges , the eminent archaeologist and learned author of that admirable work— " The Heraldry of York Minster . "

To-night , I believe , it is the purpose of the Very Rev . Dean to take up Freemasonry philosophically , and to give you his views and matured opinions upon the Craft—past , present , and future . It is needless to say that I commend the address to which you are about to listen to the earnest attention of all , feeling sure that the author of the work on that grand old edifice which every Yorkshireman reveres as a mighty effort of mediaeval art , will enrich your minds and rouse your enthusiasm for the noble principles of the Craft of which we are all devoted members .

Addresses of this character your Prov . Grand Master has always been most anxious to promote in the 42 towns of the riding over which his jurisdiction extends . It delights me to see that the Wakefield Masons have taken the initiative this winter in promulgating Masonic literature , and that they are so fortunate as to be able to introduce so learned a lecturer to encourage them in the pursuit of Masonic knowledge .

To Dr . Purey-Cust I beg to express my gratitude for his readiness in accepting my invitation as President of this Society , and I trust he will return to York satisfied that there is a great desire on the part of his brethren in this portion of the county diligently to pursue the search after truth . It is a great grief to me , dear Bro . Matthewman , that the G . A . O . T . U . has so afflicted me that I am unable to join in rendering personal homage to the Dean , or to take any part in your proceedings , beyond the expression of this sympathetic and fervent desire for their success .

Please tender my sincere obligation to the lecturer for the compliment he has paid the Society in coming to Wakefield to-night , and assure him that we shall look back upon this meeting as one of the most brilliant and fortunate of our Literary Society gatherings . —With my regards and esteem for your co-Secretary , Bro . Childe , and yourself , I am , fraternall y yours , ( Signed ) THOS . WM . TEW , President .

Bro . HENRY SMITH then in graceful terms introduced thc lecturer , and commended him to the brethren present as an archicologist , a scholar , a divine , and a Freemason , a brother whose reputation had extended far beyond the diocese from which he derived his antient title , and one who he felt sure would interest , instruct , and enlighten them . He prayed their silence and attention for Dr . Purey-Cust .

After paying a ver ) ' high compliment to Bro . Tew , and expressing his great regret that hc was unable to have the pleasure of meeting him on this most interesting occasion , ancl venturing to hope that many years of usefulness were yet in the future- for the Prov . Grand Master of West Yorkshire , thc learned Dean commenced his address . He said :

I believe I may venture to assert that I am one of the oldest Freemasons in this assembly . Initiated in 18 47 , I have been a member of the Craft for nearl y half a century . I do not , however , profess to be so well versed in Masonic ceremonial as many whom I see around me . I have , some will say , as it were , halted on the threshold , for I have never risen to a Degree higher than that of a M . M ., yet it satisfies me , and I have no ambition to go beyond it , for in the M . M . ' s Degree

you attain to that which is the peculiar province of Freemasonry—viz ., full participation in that wonderful fellowship with " all sorts and conditions of men " which , as far as I know , has never been achieved , or even attempted , by any other body corporate . The title of my address— "Freemasonry ; Past , Present , and Future " —is a somewhat ambitious one , and perhaps even alarming , but I am not going to carry you back to the distant past , I leave that to the Masonic arcb . eologist of the

day ; I shall travel backwards onl y for a period of 50 years . And it may interest the brethren to know in what aspect Freemasonry presented itself to me at that time , and what were the inducemenls which led me to join it . At that period of my life I was an Undergraduate at Oxford . Oxford was then a little known city ; people knew scarcel y anything , and cared perhaps less , as to what took place there . It was difficult of access . The authorities , in their vvisdom , thought railways

detrimental to the moral or social health of the youths who frequented its timehonoured colleges . Those young men were left pretty much to their own guidance , and throughout the whole three years of my Undergraduate life I do not remember to have received one serious word of counsel or advice from any of those under whose authority vve were placed . The examples set bv the Dons were not encouraging , the orgies of the Common room vvere notorious , and my own tutor vvas at once brilliant , learned , and intemperate . At that time there

were two Masonic lodges in Oxford—the Apollo , confined to University men , and the Alfred , for the people of the town and neighbourhood . In the society of Masons 1 found what elsewhere Oxford did not afford . I found good fellowship and social intercourse , based n . t upon mere jovial and often excessive eating and drinking , but upon refined and intelligent society , scrupulously combined with the strictest temperance . In my lodge I found conversation of a highly rational character , the opportunity of meeting men more or less distinguished in various walks in life , musicians like Stephen Elvey , for instance , and with all this charming

Wakefield Masonic Literary Society.

talk and jest there was nothing to offend . One felt at once it was a beneficent movement , and I was drawn towards it , for within it I found not only pleasant intercourse but also safety . And this , brethren , is no fanciful retrospect , as I will show you . In those days , at 9 . 15 p . m ., " Great Tom " of Christ Church pealed forth its tones in token that the peace and good order of the city were handed over to the University authorities . The police were practically deposed , and the

Proctors , with theirmyrmidons—nicknamed bull-dogs—reigned in theirstead . Their duties were to protect the streets , maintain order , arrest offenders , and to stop any Undergraduates whom they might meet , ask their name and college , and require an explanation as from whence they were coming and whither they were going . To declare yourself a Mason , and to say that you were returning from the Apollo was a passport at once ; •no further question was asked , the excellent

character of the lodge was so well known and acknowledged . This gave people a high opinion of Freemasonry , and I should like that view of it to stand . But what wonderful development since ! At that time it was no doubt substantial in strength and under distinguished patronage , for it vvas presided over by a Royal Prince , the late Duke of Sussex . But what is it now ? I do not profess to know what its numbers may be , and we have been told that " there is nothing more

fallacious than facts , except figures , " but its membership is rapidly increasing ; we are adding lodge after lodge to our roll ; it embraces all classes of society , except perhaps the labouring class , and as old faces disappear , new men it is gratifying to see come forward to supply their places . As an instance , take my own county , Lincolnshire . Its affairs have been admirably administered , and now I am glad to say that one of the latest recruits to our ranks is the young Lord Yarborough , a popular

man , with large landed interest and influence both here and in the West Riding of Yorkshire , one who will make an excellent Mason and will , at no distant date , I have no doubt , take high Masonic rank . He will shortly be " raised '' at Lincoln . In addition to this wonderful numerical increase , our Society , I believe , has improved its position in the public regard . In many places , some years ago , a Mason was looked upon as an objectionable , self-indulgent creature , if he were not something

worse , whilst in certain classes of society on the continent he is regarded , even now , as little short of a monster . My friend , the Dean of Lincoln , who is a great traveller but is not a Freemason , was telling me only the other day of a conversation he had held with a French Abbe on this point . Bewailing the unsettled condition of society the French Priest laid all the blame on the Freemasons . It was they , he declared , who caused and carried out the horrors of the French Revolution ,

they who upset thrones and destroyed dynasties , they who formed secret associations for all kinds of iniquity , they , in fact , who would overthrow all law and order and substititute no one knew what . They were Republicans , Socialists , and unbelievers , and every thing should be done to destroy their pernicious influence and to root them out from society . When assured by my friend that in England they were the very opposite of all this , that , they were loyal , patriotic , and

charitable , and that every movement for the public good was invariably supported by the Freemasons , the surprise of the FYenchman vvas extreme . The Dean of Lincoln , though no Mason , could yet testify that we vvere a steady , respectable body of men , who certainly did no harm and very likely much good . I am strong in the belief that so far from our Brotherhood exercising a disturbing influence , it has on the contrary done more to bring men together , promote good feeling , and

enlist human sympathy than any other institution that could be named . As to the future , I believe that as it is no effete survival of the past , so will it make its influence continue to be felt , and that as time goes on , by means of its three great and eternal principles , it will help to keep alive the idea that we are all one brotherhood , that we need sympathy and support , and do much to promote a genuine feeling of confidence amongst all classes and all nations . In former

days its great work was to make men known to each other vvho did not know and could not know much of each other . Its special . work seems now to be to mitigate and dissipate , by mutual intercourse and fellowship , those fallacious and mischievous misrepresentations which are tending to set class against class , and to promote " envy , hatred , malice , and all uncharitableness" broadcast through the world in the columns of the so-called " society papers , " the great curse of the

present day . Those papers live on gossip , speculation , and untruth , often I fear intentional untruth . Take an instance : ex into disce omnes . It has been lately reported by one of them that my predecessor , during the 20 years that he held the Deanery , had amassed and did actually leave behind him half a million of money . Now all those who knew the late Dean of York also knew that whatever he left at his death he had inherited from his father , and that so far from

obtaining personal wealth from his position in the Church , he spent every penny that Church supplied to him and more , on religious and charitable objects . Thus an attempt is made to set the masses against the classes , thus a good and kind-hearted man is grossly maligned . Now , I think that Freemasonry is invaluable as a countercheck for this sort of thing . Men learn to know each other , not as these papers would have us , but by mutual

intercourse , and thus a kindly feeling is generated and spread through society . The tone of a well conducted lodge , if lived up to , raises a man above this petty spite , and teaches him to look upon his fellow man with consideration and charity . Brethren , we have a great responsibility , we inherit a high prestige , we have a grand opportunity for the future , what shall vve make of it ? Onl y let us keep steadfastly to uur principles , and I have no fear of the result . Let us bring our

Freemasonry as it were up to date , let us make it a great beneficial power amongst us , let us remember that its key-note is unselfishness , tnat it is embodied philanthropy , and that the benefit of humanity and the general good of society are comprehended within its tenets . Again , let us watch well our conduct . We live as it vvere " in a city set on a hill , " the eyes of a watchful world are upon us , both as individuals and in bodies . We must , to some extent , satisfy the world at large , we must disabuse

their minds . We know that our frugal repasts are by no means what the world understands by " banquets " though otten so styled •> wecling to that archaic expression , but it will be well for us to make it , and let the world know that it is , a frugal meal . We must remove any cause ' of misrepresentation , and prevent any blemish falling on our Craft . In conclusion , very much depends upon us as individuals ; it is no use making professions unless we carry them out . Moreover , in adding

to our number , vve must try to get the right men , not men of any special grade ; men vvith right motives , wno will understand and appreciate our oojects . Freemasonry has great power for good : 1 have myself repeatedly experienced it . The right hand of fellowship has avec been extended t _ i me , and at no time more than when I first c _ une into Yorkshire a ; id tnus the practical principles of the Craft

have been put into operation on my behalt . In carrying out tne wishes of your esteemed Prov . Grand Master in addressing you this evening I have given you my personal experiences of the past , the actual condition of the present , and my own ideas as to wnat the future ought to be . I trust , brethren , you will throw yourselves heartily and thoroughly with me into this great matter , and will strive to the utmost to further the views which I have endeavoured to put before you .

At the close of the address , which was most cordiall y received , Bro . VV . I ' ESSELL proposed a hearty vote of thanks to the Dean . This was seconded b y Bro . IT . FRANCE , and supported by Bros . M . B . Hick , Major Bolton , and the Rev . H . L . Clarke , and carried with acclamation . The Very Rev . LECTURER / rising to reply , was very warmly greeted .

He said it was a great pleasure to him to come at the request ot his good friend , Bro . Tew , and address a few words to the Masons of Wakefield . That he hig hly valued and appreciated the privilege of belonging to the Craft , and that so long as Freemasonry continued to be as he had found s , ever striving to do good , aiming at a high and noble ideal , he should rejoice to be numbered amongst its members . He thanked the Deputy and every brother present for the exceeding kindness they had shown to him , ana

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