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  • April 1, 1856
  • Page 3
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, April 1, 1856: Page 3

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Untitled Article

/ ~ r treated ; of indignation also at ourselves , whose apathy is the seerdt cause of the callous i / mpoteney of Grand Lodge . Are we so stultified in our toadyism that nothing but rank in our Grand Masters will serve our turn ? Do we love the head of gold so much that we ignore altogether the tottering incapacity of the feet of clay ? "Were the

Grand Masters and their officers chosen in the purer days of Masonry for rank , above merit ? What position did Desaguliers hold in the peerage ? Or if personal influence in society is needed for the benefit of the Craft , is it now so scant of noblemen that we are obliged , for the say-so of the thing , to put up year after year with the present Grand Master , who , these very evils greatly prove , as it

is notorious also , never exerts himself for the Craft at all ? Tes ! had an energetic , talented Mason held the reins of office , we should have heard nothing of the severance of Canada . The evils our Brethren complain of justly would have been anticipated , and remedied without solicitation , not , as now , wrested from us ; but if

the heart be ihert , it is useless to look for health in the extremities . "We have deservedly lost Canada , and under circumstances affixing a lasting stigma on our Masonic discourtesy and non-observance of the first principles of propriety . It is all very well to trumpet forth the virtues of past servants , but a powerful organization like our own cannot sacrifice it ' s wide-world interests to the namby-pamby maudlin

of compliment . If the most important officer grow incompetent for business , we are rich enough to pension him ; but Masonry cannot afford to lose its self-respect and imperil its dignity by keeping in office the inert and exhausted agent of its operation . Now that the evil is done , active determination is generally announced to us , by influential Masons , to recall the Craft to a sense of its duty in restoring the law of triennial re-election of the Grand Master , and sure we are no

healthy tone can be recovered by the Order until this most necessary amelioration of the present state of things occurs . A glance at the affairs now pending and lately occurrent in Malta and Trinidad will show that no delay should be allowed to occur in strengthening our outposts in those quarters ; and until a more efficient Grand Master be appointed ,, we earnestly call upon the Craft to co-operate individually , and by a public meeting give utterance to a manifesto which may stop persecution by engendering a greater knowledge of our anti-political and anti-sectarian principles , and at the same time may reanimate those Brethren who are suffering from the tyranny of

priestly bigotry and ignorant superstition . From Malta , then , we have in the Morning Post of March 3 rd , 1850 , the following description of the successful war waged against our Order by the liomanist priests ; and that the pious (!) character of our persecutors may be estimated , we shall annex a story from the same paper ' s correspondent , of an escapade , unfortunately not singular , but , on the contrary , characteristic of these wolves in sheep ' s clothing : —•

" A most magnificent ball and entertainment was intended to have been given last evening by the various Orders of freemasons and the Knights of Malta . The

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1856-04-01, Page 3” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 6 July 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/frm_01041856/page/3/.
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Title Category Page
LODGES IN THE WEST AND SOUTH, CANADA, MALTA, TRINIDAD-OUR DUTY. Article 1
FREEMASONRY IN GREAT BRITAIN. Article 7
NOTES OF A YACHT'S CRUISE TO BALAKLAVA. Article 11
THE WONDERS OF NATURE. Article 14
REVIEWS OF NEW BOOKS. Article 19
FACES IN THE EIRE. Article 25
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 26
TO THE EDITOR OF THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZIN AND MASONIC MIRROR. Article 27
MASONIC CHARITIES. Article 29
NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 30
FINE ARTS. Article 30
THE MASONIC MIRROR. MASONIC REFORM Article 31
NOTICES OF MOTION. Article 36
THE BOYS' SCHOOL. Article 37
METROPOLITAN. Article 41
INSTRUCTION. Article 47
PROVINCIAL. Article 47
ROYAL ARCH. Article 54
KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. Article 55
SCOTLAND. Article 56
COLONIAL. Article 60
SWITZERLAND. Article 62
SUMMARY OF NEWS FOR MARCH. Article 62
Obituary. Article 65
NOTICE. Article 68
TO COEEESPONDENTS. Article 68
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Untitled Article

/ ~ r treated ; of indignation also at ourselves , whose apathy is the seerdt cause of the callous i / mpoteney of Grand Lodge . Are we so stultified in our toadyism that nothing but rank in our Grand Masters will serve our turn ? Do we love the head of gold so much that we ignore altogether the tottering incapacity of the feet of clay ? "Were the

Grand Masters and their officers chosen in the purer days of Masonry for rank , above merit ? What position did Desaguliers hold in the peerage ? Or if personal influence in society is needed for the benefit of the Craft , is it now so scant of noblemen that we are obliged , for the say-so of the thing , to put up year after year with the present Grand Master , who , these very evils greatly prove , as it

is notorious also , never exerts himself for the Craft at all ? Tes ! had an energetic , talented Mason held the reins of office , we should have heard nothing of the severance of Canada . The evils our Brethren complain of justly would have been anticipated , and remedied without solicitation , not , as now , wrested from us ; but if

the heart be ihert , it is useless to look for health in the extremities . "We have deservedly lost Canada , and under circumstances affixing a lasting stigma on our Masonic discourtesy and non-observance of the first principles of propriety . It is all very well to trumpet forth the virtues of past servants , but a powerful organization like our own cannot sacrifice it ' s wide-world interests to the namby-pamby maudlin

of compliment . If the most important officer grow incompetent for business , we are rich enough to pension him ; but Masonry cannot afford to lose its self-respect and imperil its dignity by keeping in office the inert and exhausted agent of its operation . Now that the evil is done , active determination is generally announced to us , by influential Masons , to recall the Craft to a sense of its duty in restoring the law of triennial re-election of the Grand Master , and sure we are no

healthy tone can be recovered by the Order until this most necessary amelioration of the present state of things occurs . A glance at the affairs now pending and lately occurrent in Malta and Trinidad will show that no delay should be allowed to occur in strengthening our outposts in those quarters ; and until a more efficient Grand Master be appointed ,, we earnestly call upon the Craft to co-operate individually , and by a public meeting give utterance to a manifesto which may stop persecution by engendering a greater knowledge of our anti-political and anti-sectarian principles , and at the same time may reanimate those Brethren who are suffering from the tyranny of

priestly bigotry and ignorant superstition . From Malta , then , we have in the Morning Post of March 3 rd , 1850 , the following description of the successful war waged against our Order by the liomanist priests ; and that the pious (!) character of our persecutors may be estimated , we shall annex a story from the same paper ' s correspondent , of an escapade , unfortunately not singular , but , on the contrary , characteristic of these wolves in sheep ' s clothing : —•

" A most magnificent ball and entertainment was intended to have been given last evening by the various Orders of freemasons and the Knights of Malta . The

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