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  • The Masonic Magazine
  • Dec. 1, 1880
  • Page 35
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The Masonic Magazine, Dec. 1, 1880: Page 35

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    Article THE SUPPRESSION OF THE TEMPLARS IN ENGLAND. ← Page 4 of 4
    Article IN MEMORIAM. Page 1 of 1
Page 35

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

The Suppression Of The Templars In England.

constrained to redeem them b y large sums out of the hands of the king , who had seized them . The effect was that the Order of St . John was impoverished instead of enriched , by their new acquirements . In fact , as Sismondi points out everywhere " before giving up these goods to the religious oi'ders the sovereigns universally enriched themselves by sequestering them . " The Council of Vienna saved ecclesiastical property by ordering the correct disposal of this wealth , which had been dedicated to reliious purposes . But Philip the FairEdward

g , IL , and the other dutiful crowned sons of the Church , had their own way of interpreting and carrying out the order of the Council . Thus barefaced and sacreligious robbery was added to the crimes which make the fall of the Templars one of the most portentous episodes in the history of mediteval Europe .

In Memoriam.

IN MEMORIAM .

THE following verses , on the death of Bro . James Dodds , of Scarborough , chief officer of the steamshi p Hindoo , of Hull , who was drowned in the Atlantic Ocean , February 17 th , 1880 , aged twenty-nine years , are from the pen of Mrs . G . M . Tweddell , wife of our literary Brother , George Markham Tweddell . " The only son of his mother , ancl she was a widow . "—St . Luke vii ., 12 .

Mourn for him ! oh , mourn for him ! A widow ' s only son ; Who was swept away by the raging sea Ere half his race was run .

So young to die ! and so beloved By those who knew him best : His manly form lies in the deep , No flowers bedeck his breast . Where duty call'd , he foremost stood , To try their ship to save :

'Twere better far to perish thus Than fill a coward ' s grave . Who can depict the widow ' s grief For him , her darling boy ? He who so well her love deserved—Her pride , her hope , her joy .

Gone from this earth—for ever gone ! But , on a brighter shore , We trust that they will meet again , Where parting is no more . May holy calm succeed her grief For her beloved son !

May God enable her to say , — Thy will , not mine , be done ! Mourn for him ! oh , mourn for him ! A widow ' s only son ; Who was swept away by the raging sea Ere half his race was run . Rose Cottage , Stokesley , Yorkshire .

“The Masonic Magazine: 1880-12-01, Page 35” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 8 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01121880/page/35/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
CURIOSITIES OF THE SEARCH ROOM.* Article 1
MASONIC AND GENERAL ARCHAEOLOGIA. Article 8
MISTRYSTED. Article 10
BRO. SIR CHRISTOPHER WREN. Article 11
THE ALBION LODGE, QUEBEC. Article 15
OLD RECORDS OF THE LODGE OF PEEBLES. Article 19
BEHIND THE SCENES FOR THE FIRST TIME. Article 25
A SA MAJESTE L'IMPERATRICE EUGENIE LORS DE SON RETOUR DE ZULULAND. Article 28
MASONRY IN HERALDRY. Article 29
THE SUPPRESSION OF THE TEMPLARS IN ENGLAND. Article 32
IN MEMORIAM. Article 35
THE ANCIENT MYSTERIES. Article 36
NATURE'S VOICES. Article 39
THE ASTROLOGY OF SHAKESPEARE. Article 40
THE JEWELS OF THE LODGE. Article 43
THE RESCUE. Article 44
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

The Suppression Of The Templars In England.

constrained to redeem them b y large sums out of the hands of the king , who had seized them . The effect was that the Order of St . John was impoverished instead of enriched , by their new acquirements . In fact , as Sismondi points out everywhere " before giving up these goods to the religious oi'ders the sovereigns universally enriched themselves by sequestering them . " The Council of Vienna saved ecclesiastical property by ordering the correct disposal of this wealth , which had been dedicated to reliious purposes . But Philip the FairEdward

g , IL , and the other dutiful crowned sons of the Church , had their own way of interpreting and carrying out the order of the Council . Thus barefaced and sacreligious robbery was added to the crimes which make the fall of the Templars one of the most portentous episodes in the history of mediteval Europe .

In Memoriam.

IN MEMORIAM .

THE following verses , on the death of Bro . James Dodds , of Scarborough , chief officer of the steamshi p Hindoo , of Hull , who was drowned in the Atlantic Ocean , February 17 th , 1880 , aged twenty-nine years , are from the pen of Mrs . G . M . Tweddell , wife of our literary Brother , George Markham Tweddell . " The only son of his mother , ancl she was a widow . "—St . Luke vii ., 12 .

Mourn for him ! oh , mourn for him ! A widow ' s only son ; Who was swept away by the raging sea Ere half his race was run .

So young to die ! and so beloved By those who knew him best : His manly form lies in the deep , No flowers bedeck his breast . Where duty call'd , he foremost stood , To try their ship to save :

'Twere better far to perish thus Than fill a coward ' s grave . Who can depict the widow ' s grief For him , her darling boy ? He who so well her love deserved—Her pride , her hope , her joy .

Gone from this earth—for ever gone ! But , on a brighter shore , We trust that they will meet again , Where parting is no more . May holy calm succeed her grief For her beloved son !

May God enable her to say , — Thy will , not mine , be done ! Mourn for him ! oh , mourn for him ! A widow ' s only son ; Who was swept away by the raging sea Ere half his race was run . Rose Cottage , Stokesley , Yorkshire .

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