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  • The Masonic Illustrated
  • Sept. 1, 1903
  • Page 14
  • Masonic Welcome and Farewell to Bro. Edward Terry in South Africa.
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The Masonic Illustrated, Sept. 1, 1903: Page 14

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Masonic Welcome And Farewell To Bro. Edward Terry In South Africa.

Masonic Welcome and Farewell to Bro . Edward Terry in South Africa .

IN our July issue we reported the welcome accorded to Bro . Edward Terry on his return from South Africa by the lodge which bears his name , and we have since been favoured by a correspondent with an interesting account of a special meeting of Lodge Good Hope at Port Elizabeth ,

IlllO . HOWARD TKHMY . which was convened to welcome and bid farewell to our distinguished brother , at which meeting not only were all the sister lodges represented , but Past Masters and others were present from England and Australia , while there was

an exceptional attendance of local brethren . Bro . Roger Ascham , as Worshipful Master , spared no pains to make the occasion a notable one in the history of his lodge , and the evening's proceedings will long be remembered by those present .

The working within the temple was performed in such an excellent manner by Bro . Ascham , assisted by Bros . McAdam and Forbes and his officers , that it evoked the keenest interest and warmest appreciation . The music , specially composed for the ceremonies by Bro . Ascham , added greatly to their impressiveness , and was rendered most effectively by Bros . Griffiths and Sinclair .

The brethren afterwards entertained Bro . Terry to a banquet . The customary toasts having been proposed by the Worshipful Master and pledged by the brethren , Bro . Ascham proposed "Our Distinguished Guest . " He said it was with feelings of great pride that he had the honour to propose tlie toast of their distinguished guest

Bro . Edward Terry . It was indeed a red-letter day in the annals of Lodge Good Hope that the )' , as a lodge , were privileged to welcome and meet on the level so eminent a brother , and to offer him their heartfelt and most cordial greetings . It would be presumption on his part

to attempt to extol Bro . Terry as an actor . All the world knew there was but one Edward Terry . Many of them had enjoyed witnessing his unique creations in years gone by in the clear Motherland , but they all knew him by repute as one resting on the top-most rung of the ladder of fame in his art ; of the high esteem in which he was held by all , from His Majesty the King downwards , not only for his

exceptional gilts as an actor , but for his sterling qualities as a man . His advent in their town had been a recovered joy to most of them . They had been enabled to renew those memories—to laugh again—yes ! and cry , too—over his incomparable presentment of lovable Dick Phenyl , a study of a pathetic and noble character which he had inseparably

linked with his name . But although they could not dissociate the fact from their feelings that they had with them the greatest English comedian of their time , it was as a Mason , a brother , that they particularly rejoiced to welcome him that night . The Masonic attainments of Bro . Terry were common

knowledge to the Brotherhood universally—that being blest with a goodly portion of this world ' s riches he contributed largely in support of Masonic charities and in doing good to others . During Bro . Terry ' s short stay in Port Elizabeth he had permitted him ( the speaker ) to see

much of him , and in that limited time he had seen somewhat of his nobility of character , had had practical evidence of his kindly disposition , of his constant thought for others , and he knew he lived the life of a Mason , that he was a living example of what a Mason should be , that he daily carried

out the principles and tenets of their Order . The occasion of their meeting would never be forgotten by the lodge and the brethren assembled there that night . They were proud to have him in that remote corner of his Majesty's dominions , and when he was at home again , separated by so many

miles of ocean , they hoped he would sometimes think of them with pleasant recollections . The toast was drunk most enthusiastically , and on rising to reply Bro . Terry was greeted with an outburst of applause , and during the course of his speech , the brethren were fairly

convulsed with laughter . He said that in the words of a gentlemen who , in the early clays of his dramatic career gave him many sleepless nights , he meant one William Shakespeare , " 1 am not an orator as Brutus was . " In fact , as Artemus Ward says , " I am best pleased when I am silent , and so are my

1 ) 110 . ROGKR ASCHAM . friends . " He felt so intensely the position he occupied that evening , that he was like the gentleman , who , when paying his addresses to his lady love , said , " She speaks , yet she says nothing , " then he added , " But what of that , her eye

“The Masonic Illustrated: 1903-09-01, Page 14” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 15 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mil/issues/mil_01091903/page/14/.
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
The Province of Somerset. Article 2
Centenary of Freemasonry in Australia. Article 5
The late Bro . Major Charles W. Carrell, P.A.G.D.C. Article 6
Consecration of the Charles Lyne Lodge, No. 2964. Article 7
The Phœnix Lodge, No. 94, Durham. Article 8
Laying the Foundation-stone of the Gordon Boys' Home. Article 9
Untitled Ad 10
Untitled Ad 10
Untitled Ad 10
Untitled Ad 10
Masonic Tradition. Article 10
At the Sign of the Perfect Ashlar. Article 11
Masonic Welcome and Farewell to Bro. Edward Terry in South Africa. Article 14
The Masonic Temple at Johannesburg. Article 15
Laying the Foundation-stone of Freemasons ' Hall. Article 16
Provincial Grand Lodge of Devon. Article 16
The Robert Freke Gould Lodge, No. 2874. Article 17
History of the Emulation Lodge of Improvement, No. 256.——(Continued). Article 18
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Masonic Welcome And Farewell To Bro. Edward Terry In South Africa.

Masonic Welcome and Farewell to Bro . Edward Terry in South Africa .

IN our July issue we reported the welcome accorded to Bro . Edward Terry on his return from South Africa by the lodge which bears his name , and we have since been favoured by a correspondent with an interesting account of a special meeting of Lodge Good Hope at Port Elizabeth ,

IlllO . HOWARD TKHMY . which was convened to welcome and bid farewell to our distinguished brother , at which meeting not only were all the sister lodges represented , but Past Masters and others were present from England and Australia , while there was

an exceptional attendance of local brethren . Bro . Roger Ascham , as Worshipful Master , spared no pains to make the occasion a notable one in the history of his lodge , and the evening's proceedings will long be remembered by those present .

The working within the temple was performed in such an excellent manner by Bro . Ascham , assisted by Bros . McAdam and Forbes and his officers , that it evoked the keenest interest and warmest appreciation . The music , specially composed for the ceremonies by Bro . Ascham , added greatly to their impressiveness , and was rendered most effectively by Bros . Griffiths and Sinclair .

The brethren afterwards entertained Bro . Terry to a banquet . The customary toasts having been proposed by the Worshipful Master and pledged by the brethren , Bro . Ascham proposed "Our Distinguished Guest . " He said it was with feelings of great pride that he had the honour to propose tlie toast of their distinguished guest

Bro . Edward Terry . It was indeed a red-letter day in the annals of Lodge Good Hope that the )' , as a lodge , were privileged to welcome and meet on the level so eminent a brother , and to offer him their heartfelt and most cordial greetings . It would be presumption on his part

to attempt to extol Bro . Terry as an actor . All the world knew there was but one Edward Terry . Many of them had enjoyed witnessing his unique creations in years gone by in the clear Motherland , but they all knew him by repute as one resting on the top-most rung of the ladder of fame in his art ; of the high esteem in which he was held by all , from His Majesty the King downwards , not only for his

exceptional gilts as an actor , but for his sterling qualities as a man . His advent in their town had been a recovered joy to most of them . They had been enabled to renew those memories—to laugh again—yes ! and cry , too—over his incomparable presentment of lovable Dick Phenyl , a study of a pathetic and noble character which he had inseparably

linked with his name . But although they could not dissociate the fact from their feelings that they had with them the greatest English comedian of their time , it was as a Mason , a brother , that they particularly rejoiced to welcome him that night . The Masonic attainments of Bro . Terry were common

knowledge to the Brotherhood universally—that being blest with a goodly portion of this world ' s riches he contributed largely in support of Masonic charities and in doing good to others . During Bro . Terry ' s short stay in Port Elizabeth he had permitted him ( the speaker ) to see

much of him , and in that limited time he had seen somewhat of his nobility of character , had had practical evidence of his kindly disposition , of his constant thought for others , and he knew he lived the life of a Mason , that he was a living example of what a Mason should be , that he daily carried

out the principles and tenets of their Order . The occasion of their meeting would never be forgotten by the lodge and the brethren assembled there that night . They were proud to have him in that remote corner of his Majesty's dominions , and when he was at home again , separated by so many

miles of ocean , they hoped he would sometimes think of them with pleasant recollections . The toast was drunk most enthusiastically , and on rising to reply Bro . Terry was greeted with an outburst of applause , and during the course of his speech , the brethren were fairly

convulsed with laughter . He said that in the words of a gentlemen who , in the early clays of his dramatic career gave him many sleepless nights , he meant one William Shakespeare , " 1 am not an orator as Brutus was . " In fact , as Artemus Ward says , " I am best pleased when I am silent , and so are my

1 ) 110 . ROGKR ASCHAM . friends . " He felt so intensely the position he occupied that evening , that he was like the gentleman , who , when paying his addresses to his lady love , said , " She speaks , yet she says nothing , " then he added , " But what of that , her eye

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