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  • The Masonic Mirror
  • Sept. 1, 1855
  • Page 30
  • PROVINCIAL LODGES.
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The Masonic Mirror, Sept. 1, 1855: Page 30

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    Article PROVINCIAL LODGES. ← Page 5 of 21 →
Page 30

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

Provincial Lodges.

The Rev . gentleman , in responding to the toast , thanked the brethren for the warm , and he would say , enthusiastic manner in which they had received his name . It gave him very great pleasure on receiving the summons of their Secretary to respond at once to their wishes , ancl to afford them the assistance of his services . He felt great pleasure in meeting the brethren ; their reception of him was so kind , their attention so marked during the solemn services of the sanctuary , that he trusted that pleasure to himself would be accompanied with profit to them . It

was indeed a happy day to him thus to meet with an assembly of kindred spirits ; it refreshed his soul amid the toils and labours necessarily connected with the charge of a large and important parish ; it was refreshing to his spirit to be permitted the free and friendly interchange of feeling amid a company of brethren , knit together in unity , and who had greeted his presence with such a warm and fraternal reception .

" The thread of our life would be dark , heaven knows , If it were not for friendship and love intertwined ; And I care not how soon I may sink to repose , When these blessings shall cease to be dear to my mind . " But it was not because he loved and valued their society that he was present among them , but because he admired the principles of that venerated Order of

which they had the honour and happiness to be free and accepted members . Masonry was indeed a venerable Order—to be honoured for her antiquity— " Her hoary head was a crown of righteousness . " The student who loved to explore amid the arcana , of the past , or to follow up the stream of time till it conducted him far beyond those ages that were wrapt iu darkness;—the antiquarian that loved to turn over the dusty and time-worn tomes of the mighty dead—would each find in Masonry a theme and a subject of surpassing interest . Existing in the dark ages of

antiquity , frowned upon at one time , caressed at another , still unscathed , unchanged by time , her secrets preserved inviolate , she still lived and flourished in her virgin pride and purity ; and of her it might be said , " Thou goest forth dread , fathomless , alone ! " Masonry was a soul-exalting science ; the subjects of her contemplation were the works of nature ' s God ; amid these she loved to conduct her students , and to impress their mind with feelings of deepest veneration for "the Great Architect of the Universe . From nature ' s works , she ascended to the contemplation of nature ' s first great cause . The vaulted roof of heaven , the sun , the moon , the stars , the laws of gravity and of order that regulated the system of

creation—each and all subjects of kindred interest , engaged the enlightened attention of her members ; while , at the same time , by the peculiar laws of the Order , they impressed the heart with significent lessons of moral worth . Masonry was a benevolent institution . Her design was noble ; to bind together the sons of men in one happy fraternity of unity , and harmony , and love ; to assuage the sorrows of humanity ; to do good ancl to communicate ; "to pity the distressed inclined , as well as just to all mankind "—this was the noble design of Masonry , and as such she

acted as a graceful handmaid to Christianity . In the prosecution of this noble object , Masonry was a fine traveller—mountains , seas , or continents obstructed not her progress . On the burning plains of Africa , the frozen regions of the north , or favoured and sunny spots of the south ; with the unlettered Indian and the untutored Laplander , the savage or sage , this unwearried traveller was found prosecuting her noble designs of benenolence and love . Masonry was a fine linguist , she spoke in all languages , the interpretation of tongues was hers . She called no man a Barbarian but

" , " understanding the hidden language of the heart , grasped him with the hand of friendship , and embraced him as a brother , Masonry was a good neighbour as well as a kind inmate . In the home circle she presided as a queen , shedding her benign influence around , inculcating lessons of unity and love , teaching mankind to he forbearing and forgiving , and bringing the neighbourhood in a family circle of happiness ancl harmony . The good Mason must be a good father , a good husband ; hence they would find that although the ladies were not privileged to be members , they were for the most part ardent admirers of the Order .

“The Masonic Mirror: 1855-09-01, Page 30” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 13 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mir/issues/mmg_01091855/page/30/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
THE "SUSSEX WING" OF THE ROYAL FREE HOSPITAL. Article 1
THE MARK DEGREE. Article 3
FREEMASONRY IN ENGLAND. Article 4
BROTHERLY LOVE. Article 11
FORGET-ME-NOT. Article 19
MASONIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 20
LONDON LODGES Article 25
PROVINCIAL LODGES. Article 26
ROYAL ARCH. Article 46
THE HIGH DEGREES. Article 47
THE COLONIES. Article 48
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 49
SUMMARY OF NEWS FOR AUGUST. Article 51
Untitled Article 59
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 60
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Provincial Lodges.

The Rev . gentleman , in responding to the toast , thanked the brethren for the warm , and he would say , enthusiastic manner in which they had received his name . It gave him very great pleasure on receiving the summons of their Secretary to respond at once to their wishes , ancl to afford them the assistance of his services . He felt great pleasure in meeting the brethren ; their reception of him was so kind , their attention so marked during the solemn services of the sanctuary , that he trusted that pleasure to himself would be accompanied with profit to them . It

was indeed a happy day to him thus to meet with an assembly of kindred spirits ; it refreshed his soul amid the toils and labours necessarily connected with the charge of a large and important parish ; it was refreshing to his spirit to be permitted the free and friendly interchange of feeling amid a company of brethren , knit together in unity , and who had greeted his presence with such a warm and fraternal reception .

" The thread of our life would be dark , heaven knows , If it were not for friendship and love intertwined ; And I care not how soon I may sink to repose , When these blessings shall cease to be dear to my mind . " But it was not because he loved and valued their society that he was present among them , but because he admired the principles of that venerated Order of

which they had the honour and happiness to be free and accepted members . Masonry was indeed a venerable Order—to be honoured for her antiquity— " Her hoary head was a crown of righteousness . " The student who loved to explore amid the arcana , of the past , or to follow up the stream of time till it conducted him far beyond those ages that were wrapt iu darkness;—the antiquarian that loved to turn over the dusty and time-worn tomes of the mighty dead—would each find in Masonry a theme and a subject of surpassing interest . Existing in the dark ages of

antiquity , frowned upon at one time , caressed at another , still unscathed , unchanged by time , her secrets preserved inviolate , she still lived and flourished in her virgin pride and purity ; and of her it might be said , " Thou goest forth dread , fathomless , alone ! " Masonry was a soul-exalting science ; the subjects of her contemplation were the works of nature ' s God ; amid these she loved to conduct her students , and to impress their mind with feelings of deepest veneration for "the Great Architect of the Universe . From nature ' s works , she ascended to the contemplation of nature ' s first great cause . The vaulted roof of heaven , the sun , the moon , the stars , the laws of gravity and of order that regulated the system of

creation—each and all subjects of kindred interest , engaged the enlightened attention of her members ; while , at the same time , by the peculiar laws of the Order , they impressed the heart with significent lessons of moral worth . Masonry was a benevolent institution . Her design was noble ; to bind together the sons of men in one happy fraternity of unity , and harmony , and love ; to assuage the sorrows of humanity ; to do good ancl to communicate ; "to pity the distressed inclined , as well as just to all mankind "—this was the noble design of Masonry , and as such she

acted as a graceful handmaid to Christianity . In the prosecution of this noble object , Masonry was a fine traveller—mountains , seas , or continents obstructed not her progress . On the burning plains of Africa , the frozen regions of the north , or favoured and sunny spots of the south ; with the unlettered Indian and the untutored Laplander , the savage or sage , this unwearried traveller was found prosecuting her noble designs of benenolence and love . Masonry was a fine linguist , she spoke in all languages , the interpretation of tongues was hers . She called no man a Barbarian but

" , " understanding the hidden language of the heart , grasped him with the hand of friendship , and embraced him as a brother , Masonry was a good neighbour as well as a kind inmate . In the home circle she presided as a queen , shedding her benign influence around , inculcating lessons of unity and love , teaching mankind to he forbearing and forgiving , and bringing the neighbourhood in a family circle of happiness ancl harmony . The good Mason must be a good father , a good husband ; hence they would find that although the ladies were not privileged to be members , they were for the most part ardent admirers of the Order .

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