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  • Jan. 1, 1901
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The Masonic Illustrated, Jan. 1, 1901: Page 24

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Page 24

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Famous F.M. Songs.

bodies . In the vear before-mentioned , 17 ^ 8 , the Grand Lodjfe of Minister ordered that each Incite should furnish itself with a copv of Anderson ' s Consliliilions , the only printed book of the kind then in existence . The volume thus procured is extant in the archives of the First Lodge of Ireland , Cork , which is really the successor of the Grand

Lodge of Minister when it gave its allegiance to the Grand Lodge of Ireland , after the reorganization of that Grand Lodge under Lord Kingston in 1731 . On the wide marg'ii of the page that contains the E . A . Song as Bro . Matthew Birkhead left it , some contemporary Brother has inserted the verse , and has done us the good turn of

inscribing it with the name of the author , SI ' KIXGKTT PKNX . This worthy Brother ,, the favourite grandson of William Penn , the founder of Pennsylvania , had been a member of the Lodge at the Ship , behind the Royal Exchange , London , as far back as 1 723 , and served as Deputy Grand Master of the Grand Lodge of Minister in 1726 and 1727 .

Most of us have forgotten—perhaps some of us ' never knew—that William Penn , the Quaker , was ; m Irish landlord . As a matter of history , he was in residence on his Minister estate when '' the call" to become a Quaker seized him . The tie that bound the founder of Pennsylvania to Ireland is not without its bearing on the history of Freemasonry . The

connection between Minister and Pennsylvania in its early clays was close and constant . To-day , what we technically call the Work of the Grand Lodge of Pennsylvania stands far nearer to the Work of the Grand Lodge of Ireland , and , therefore , to the Work of the Grand Lodge of the Antients , than to the present Work of the Grand Lodge of England . Neither Pennsylvania nor Ireland was directly affected by the modifications necessitated in England by the Union of 1813 .

Already , before the authorship of the versicle had been set at rest by the discovery of the entry in the Minister copy of the Book of Constitutions , various circumstances had engendered a suspicion of the Irish origin of the versicle . In the opening months of 1735 , N . S ., two concurrent editions of Bro . William Smith ' s Pocket Companion for Freemasons

were published in London and Dublin . There is strong presumption that Bro . William Smith was an Irish Freemason , though it is proverbially impracticable to identify any particular member of the great Smith family . At any rate , lie took care to lit the Pocket Companion , for the Brethren according to the side of the English Channel on which

their lodges might be . The little book found instant and wide acceptance . Immediately after its publication Dr . Anderson thought it expedient to incite the Grand Lodge of England to discourage its circulation among the Brethren lest it should interfere with the sale of his forthcoming venture , the proposed New Edition of the Hook of

Constitutions . Not without reason , for there were frequent editions of the 1 'ockel Companion not only in England , but also in Scotland , where the Grand Lodge of Scotland had given it a sort of sanction by procuring , in 1740 , " seven unbound copies for the use of Grand Lodge . " It was , presumably , from this source that Callendar derived the version of the Entered Apprentice Song to which we have referred above .

In the Dublin edition of the Pocket Companion , issued under the express sanction of the Grand Officers of Ireland , SpringeU Penn ' s verse is given as an integral part of the song , without note or comment . In the edition for use in England , where they knew better , the stanza is given as an addendum , with the deprecatory

heading : — "The following verse is often sung between the Fifth and Sixtli Verses . " Evidently , the verse had been adopted in Ireland , and was on its way to being accepted bv the English Brethren . Then , too , the rhyme of "Sincere" to "Fair" is , to modern earsfaulty and distinctly indicative of an Irish

, pronunciation . This was noticed by Bro . R . Greeven , a most distinguished member of the Bengal Civil Service , in an erudite address on "Tlie Ladies" in Freemasonry , delivered at Benares . The acuteness of Bro . K . Greeven ' s observation is the more worth y of praise , inasmuch as he had bv no means all the facts before him . As a matter of historical

philology , it is well to bear in mind that the Irish brogue is mainly a perpetuation of the Tudor pronunciation . The Irish peasant , especially in the South of Ireland , has not had tlie opportunity of following and adopting the later developments of South Anglian orthoepy , and his pronunciation to-day is much nearer than a Cockney ' s to that of Spenser

and Raleigh . Something similar may be traced in the relations existing between the Walloon French , the Parisian French of tlie huduud , and the veritable I . angne d ' oui .

Famous F.M. Songs.

Nothing has been ascertained of the life that Bro . Matthew Birkhead lived , nor even the date of his death . The waters of oblivion have engulphed him . But his lyric has made an indelible mark on Freemasonry , and as long as the Craft lasts , so long will his name be associated with its history . ( To be Continued . )

Answers To Correspondents.

Answers to Correspondents .

In view id" the limitation ol" space , we cannot undertake In insert letters I ' fnni correspondents , bill we shall be pleased lo answer to the best ol" our ability any questions submitted to us and that may be fitly committed lo print . We trust our readers will exercise that caution in respect to such enquiries which is expected from every seeker after Masonic light . II " .. 1 / . Dispensations are only granted in cases specifically provided for in the Hook of Constitutions , such as anticipating or postponing day of

meeting of a lodge , etc ., so that your failure lo obtain a dispensation lo raise a candidate at a less interval than one month from his receiving a former degree is easily explained . All the eases in which dispensations may hebe granted will be found in page 151 of the Hook of Constitutions , and beyond these the Grand Master has no power to issue them . MASTER M . ISOX .- Emblematic frames for certificates are obtainable from most picture-frame dealersbut framing such documents is a highly

, inconvenient practice . It is not only an unnecessary advertisement of your connection wilh the Crafl , but often precludes you from visitingother lodges , when tlie production of the Grand Lodge Certificate is necessary to gain admission . ! l is much belter to keep il in a case thai is always accessible . . tO / XI . XC MEM 1 SER . The declaration referred lo will be found in the more recent editions of the Hook of Constitutions . It is an addition to

Law I Si ; , and reads as follows :- " livery brother who has been initiated into Masonry in a regular lodge not under the constitution of the Grand Lodge of England shall , previously lo his becoming a member of miv lodge , declare in open lodge his adhesion lo the Hook of Consliliilions , and promise due obedience to the Grand Master and the Rules and Regulations of Grand Lodge , and the fact shall be recorded on the lodge minutes . " EXOI'IRER . On rellection , we lliitik you will see that your enquire

should not have been made in writing , and still less should a reply have been asked for in prinl . You should make a point of attending a lodge of instruction , or , if that is not practicable , seek the lirst opportunity of consulting -an experienced Past Master or qualified Preceptor .

Ad02403

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59 , MARK LANE , LONDON , E . C

ORICINAL CASES OF 12 Bottles - 66-per case j 24 Imp . Pints 104-per case 24 i ,, - 71 - ,, I 6 Magnums -66- „ CARRIAGE PAID .

GEOTw . SMITH'S VERZENAY

.AS SUPPLIED TO ROYALTY . Orders accompanied by remittance should be sent direct to Geo . W . SMITH , 59 , Mark Lane , London , E . C Telegraphic Address "VERZENAY , London . "

, . .

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“The Masonic Illustrated: 1901-01-01, Page 24” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 17 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mil/issues/mil_01011901/page/24/.
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
Freemasonry in Cardiff. Article 2
The late Bro. SirArthur Sullivan, Past Grand Organist. Article 5
The Deputation to Berlin. Article 7
United Grand Lodge of England. Article 9
Grand Mark Lodge. Article 9
Untitled Article 9
Untitled Ad 9
Masonic Relics at Carrickfergus. Article 10
Untitled Ad 11
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Untitled Ad 11
Untitled Ad 11
Untitled Ad 11
Untitled Ad 11
Untitled Ad 11
Untitled Ad 12
Untitled Article 12
Untitled Ad 12
1900. Article 12
At the Sign of the Perfect Ashlar. Article 13
The late Bro. Sir Alfred Bevan, P.G. Treasurer. Article 18
An Old Masters' Lodge. Article 18
Untitled Ad 19
Masonry in Northern Natal.—The Boer War. Article 20
Hnight Templary. Article 22
Untitled Article 22
Famous F.M. Songs. Article 23
Untitled Ad 23
Answers to Correspondents. Article 24
Untitled Ad 24
Untitled Ad 24
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Famous F.M. Songs.

bodies . In the vear before-mentioned , 17 ^ 8 , the Grand Lodjfe of Minister ordered that each Incite should furnish itself with a copv of Anderson ' s Consliliilions , the only printed book of the kind then in existence . The volume thus procured is extant in the archives of the First Lodge of Ireland , Cork , which is really the successor of the Grand

Lodge of Minister when it gave its allegiance to the Grand Lodge of Ireland , after the reorganization of that Grand Lodge under Lord Kingston in 1731 . On the wide marg'ii of the page that contains the E . A . Song as Bro . Matthew Birkhead left it , some contemporary Brother has inserted the verse , and has done us the good turn of

inscribing it with the name of the author , SI ' KIXGKTT PKNX . This worthy Brother ,, the favourite grandson of William Penn , the founder of Pennsylvania , had been a member of the Lodge at the Ship , behind the Royal Exchange , London , as far back as 1 723 , and served as Deputy Grand Master of the Grand Lodge of Minister in 1726 and 1727 .

Most of us have forgotten—perhaps some of us ' never knew—that William Penn , the Quaker , was ; m Irish landlord . As a matter of history , he was in residence on his Minister estate when '' the call" to become a Quaker seized him . The tie that bound the founder of Pennsylvania to Ireland is not without its bearing on the history of Freemasonry . The

connection between Minister and Pennsylvania in its early clays was close and constant . To-day , what we technically call the Work of the Grand Lodge of Pennsylvania stands far nearer to the Work of the Grand Lodge of Ireland , and , therefore , to the Work of the Grand Lodge of the Antients , than to the present Work of the Grand Lodge of England . Neither Pennsylvania nor Ireland was directly affected by the modifications necessitated in England by the Union of 1813 .

Already , before the authorship of the versicle had been set at rest by the discovery of the entry in the Minister copy of the Book of Constitutions , various circumstances had engendered a suspicion of the Irish origin of the versicle . In the opening months of 1735 , N . S ., two concurrent editions of Bro . William Smith ' s Pocket Companion for Freemasons

were published in London and Dublin . There is strong presumption that Bro . William Smith was an Irish Freemason , though it is proverbially impracticable to identify any particular member of the great Smith family . At any rate , lie took care to lit the Pocket Companion , for the Brethren according to the side of the English Channel on which

their lodges might be . The little book found instant and wide acceptance . Immediately after its publication Dr . Anderson thought it expedient to incite the Grand Lodge of England to discourage its circulation among the Brethren lest it should interfere with the sale of his forthcoming venture , the proposed New Edition of the Hook of

Constitutions . Not without reason , for there were frequent editions of the 1 'ockel Companion not only in England , but also in Scotland , where the Grand Lodge of Scotland had given it a sort of sanction by procuring , in 1740 , " seven unbound copies for the use of Grand Lodge . " It was , presumably , from this source that Callendar derived the version of the Entered Apprentice Song to which we have referred above .

In the Dublin edition of the Pocket Companion , issued under the express sanction of the Grand Officers of Ireland , SpringeU Penn ' s verse is given as an integral part of the song , without note or comment . In the edition for use in England , where they knew better , the stanza is given as an addendum , with the deprecatory

heading : — "The following verse is often sung between the Fifth and Sixtli Verses . " Evidently , the verse had been adopted in Ireland , and was on its way to being accepted bv the English Brethren . Then , too , the rhyme of "Sincere" to "Fair" is , to modern earsfaulty and distinctly indicative of an Irish

, pronunciation . This was noticed by Bro . R . Greeven , a most distinguished member of the Bengal Civil Service , in an erudite address on "Tlie Ladies" in Freemasonry , delivered at Benares . The acuteness of Bro . K . Greeven ' s observation is the more worth y of praise , inasmuch as he had bv no means all the facts before him . As a matter of historical

philology , it is well to bear in mind that the Irish brogue is mainly a perpetuation of the Tudor pronunciation . The Irish peasant , especially in the South of Ireland , has not had tlie opportunity of following and adopting the later developments of South Anglian orthoepy , and his pronunciation to-day is much nearer than a Cockney ' s to that of Spenser

and Raleigh . Something similar may be traced in the relations existing between the Walloon French , the Parisian French of tlie huduud , and the veritable I . angne d ' oui .

Famous F.M. Songs.

Nothing has been ascertained of the life that Bro . Matthew Birkhead lived , nor even the date of his death . The waters of oblivion have engulphed him . But his lyric has made an indelible mark on Freemasonry , and as long as the Craft lasts , so long will his name be associated with its history . ( To be Continued . )

Answers To Correspondents.

Answers to Correspondents .

In view id" the limitation ol" space , we cannot undertake In insert letters I ' fnni correspondents , bill we shall be pleased lo answer to the best ol" our ability any questions submitted to us and that may be fitly committed lo print . We trust our readers will exercise that caution in respect to such enquiries which is expected from every seeker after Masonic light . II " .. 1 / . Dispensations are only granted in cases specifically provided for in the Hook of Constitutions , such as anticipating or postponing day of

meeting of a lodge , etc ., so that your failure lo obtain a dispensation lo raise a candidate at a less interval than one month from his receiving a former degree is easily explained . All the eases in which dispensations may hebe granted will be found in page 151 of the Hook of Constitutions , and beyond these the Grand Master has no power to issue them . MASTER M . ISOX .- Emblematic frames for certificates are obtainable from most picture-frame dealersbut framing such documents is a highly

, inconvenient practice . It is not only an unnecessary advertisement of your connection wilh the Crafl , but often precludes you from visitingother lodges , when tlie production of the Grand Lodge Certificate is necessary to gain admission . ! l is much belter to keep il in a case thai is always accessible . . tO / XI . XC MEM 1 SER . The declaration referred lo will be found in the more recent editions of the Hook of Constitutions . It is an addition to

Law I Si ; , and reads as follows :- " livery brother who has been initiated into Masonry in a regular lodge not under the constitution of the Grand Lodge of England shall , previously lo his becoming a member of miv lodge , declare in open lodge his adhesion lo the Hook of Consliliilions , and promise due obedience to the Grand Master and the Rules and Regulations of Grand Lodge , and the fact shall be recorded on the lodge minutes . " EXOI'IRER . On rellection , we lliitik you will see that your enquire

should not have been made in writing , and still less should a reply have been asked for in prinl . You should make a point of attending a lodge of instruction , or , if that is not practicable , seek the lirst opportunity of consulting -an experienced Past Master or qualified Preceptor .

Ad02403

Can only be obtained from Ceo . W . SMITH

59 , MARK LANE , LONDON , E . C

ORICINAL CASES OF 12 Bottles - 66-per case j 24 Imp . Pints 104-per case 24 i ,, - 71 - ,, I 6 Magnums -66- „ CARRIAGE PAID .

GEOTw . SMITH'S VERZENAY

.AS SUPPLIED TO ROYALTY . Orders accompanied by remittance should be sent direct to Geo . W . SMITH , 59 , Mark Lane , London , E . C Telegraphic Address "VERZENAY , London . "

, . .

Ad02404

IMPORTED RUSSIAN CIGARETTES .

Higli-clnss ; wilh or without . Mouthp

Sample Boxes of 10 , 1 / 9 , 1 / 3 , 9 d ., 6 d ., post free

Write fur our Jtlnslrali'il . ' ulaloi / iie Depot for KoushnarefT ' s Cigarettes

si , : M :. A .: R ,: K : : D . A .: r > r : E , E . O

ieces . . f . .

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