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  • May 1, 1855
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, May 1, 1855: Page 5

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way to pre-eminence through libertinism , falsehood , and dishonour . Upon applying , therefore , our second analysis to the utility of our system , namely , a contrast with the exoteric usage of the world , we must confess , that if her claim be fairly weighed , Masonry , in this aspect , commands our indisputable regard . There is also difference in the manner of assistance . If I throw a

penny to a beggar with an intention of breaking his head , says Johnson , though I miss him , and he is benefited by the coin , he has small reason to thank his untoward benefactor . Now even with the intention of charity , consideration of the feelings of the recipient , not only enhances the gift , but ( and we wish this were oftener remembered ) it may decide the whole issue of the act . Whatever damages

selfrespect , impoverishes morality ; the relief , however opportune , is swamped by the degradation of the gift , and the glow of gratitiade , pales before the blush of shame ! Charity , like the heart , ought to animate the whole system , yet its beat be silent and unseen ; and the very members which owe to it their life , ought to be unconscious of the source of their vitality . To stigmatise penury

therefore with grotesque and obsolete costume , to array the recipients of our alms as outrageously as the occupants of our prisons , is to stamp disgrace on want ; to pour not oil , but liquid fire , upon the the heart ' s sore place , and to fix , by an indelible record of mendicancy , a barrier to the ambition of a noble spirit . In this respect , then ,

Masonry deserves commendation ; many juvenile recipients of its aid are unconscious of aught approaching to eleemosynary association , and it has long since discovered that the rays of Charity ' s bright sun affect those , most easily , who bask beneath it , —without woollen coats , thick , bilious-looking stockings , or corduroys .

Our space does not permit us—for we are happy to say , the demand upon it rapidly increases from all quarters—to adduce so much evidence as we should desire of the usefulness of Masonry in stripping fictitious—or at least , in separating hypocrisy from—virtue . In the most satirical notes to a work , probably , which have appeared of late years , the Editor remarks that , — " Benevolence is but dry fare

without turbot and lobster sauce , "—thereby intimating the humiliating truth , that no inconsiderable amount of liberality , springs from gluttonous good-humour . Not that we are ascetic enough to impugn the fact , that conviviality lubricates charity as it does most business ; but leaving the festive consideration , it must be confessed that the single , spontaneous effusion of charity , unheralded by great names ,

long lists , or egotistic speeches , is of rare occurrence in the world . To test therefore the genuineness of benevolence , we have to consider its motive , as exemplified by the method , of its action , and this test vindicates the singleness of Masonic philanthropy . It is discharged by each singly , —the individual not waiting for collective encouragement , — towards the necessitous , under the tie of mutual fidelity , and to the honour of the Universal liulcr . Obligation in * Gay ' s Italics , with Annotations hy Octavius Freire Owen , M . A . F . S . A ., Hector of Burstow , Surrey . London : G . Houtledgo and Co .

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1855-05-01, Page 5” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 15 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_01051855/page/5/.
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Title Category Page
AMERICA. Article 54
TRAVELS BY A FREEMASON. Article 11
ON THE POLITICAL CONDITION OF THE ENGLISH PEASANTRY DURING THE MIDDLE AGES. Article 17
LONDON AND ITS MASONS. Article 1
ANIMAL AND HUMAN INSTINCT. Article 21
THE EMPEROR'S VISIT. Article 28
REV. BRO. OLIVER, D.D., VICAR OF SCOPWICK. Article 30
REVIEWS OF NEW BOOKS. Article 31
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 63
NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 38
MASONIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 40
METROPOLITAN. Article 43
PROVINCIAL. Article 45
SCOTLAND. Article 51
COLONIAL. Article 52
INDIA. Article 54
TURKEY. Article 56
METROPOLITAN LODGE MEETINGS FOR THE MONTH Of MAY. Article 57
LODGES OF INSTRUCTION. Article 59
CHAPTERS OF INSTRUCTION. Article 60
Obituary Article 60
NOTICE. Article 62
ROYAL MEDICAL BENEVOLENT COLLEGE. Article 62
NOTES ON ANTIQUARIAN RESEARCH Article 6
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Page 5

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

Untitled Article

way to pre-eminence through libertinism , falsehood , and dishonour . Upon applying , therefore , our second analysis to the utility of our system , namely , a contrast with the exoteric usage of the world , we must confess , that if her claim be fairly weighed , Masonry , in this aspect , commands our indisputable regard . There is also difference in the manner of assistance . If I throw a

penny to a beggar with an intention of breaking his head , says Johnson , though I miss him , and he is benefited by the coin , he has small reason to thank his untoward benefactor . Now even with the intention of charity , consideration of the feelings of the recipient , not only enhances the gift , but ( and we wish this were oftener remembered ) it may decide the whole issue of the act . Whatever damages

selfrespect , impoverishes morality ; the relief , however opportune , is swamped by the degradation of the gift , and the glow of gratitiade , pales before the blush of shame ! Charity , like the heart , ought to animate the whole system , yet its beat be silent and unseen ; and the very members which owe to it their life , ought to be unconscious of the source of their vitality . To stigmatise penury

therefore with grotesque and obsolete costume , to array the recipients of our alms as outrageously as the occupants of our prisons , is to stamp disgrace on want ; to pour not oil , but liquid fire , upon the the heart ' s sore place , and to fix , by an indelible record of mendicancy , a barrier to the ambition of a noble spirit . In this respect , then ,

Masonry deserves commendation ; many juvenile recipients of its aid are unconscious of aught approaching to eleemosynary association , and it has long since discovered that the rays of Charity ' s bright sun affect those , most easily , who bask beneath it , —without woollen coats , thick , bilious-looking stockings , or corduroys .

Our space does not permit us—for we are happy to say , the demand upon it rapidly increases from all quarters—to adduce so much evidence as we should desire of the usefulness of Masonry in stripping fictitious—or at least , in separating hypocrisy from—virtue . In the most satirical notes to a work , probably , which have appeared of late years , the Editor remarks that , — " Benevolence is but dry fare

without turbot and lobster sauce , "—thereby intimating the humiliating truth , that no inconsiderable amount of liberality , springs from gluttonous good-humour . Not that we are ascetic enough to impugn the fact , that conviviality lubricates charity as it does most business ; but leaving the festive consideration , it must be confessed that the single , spontaneous effusion of charity , unheralded by great names ,

long lists , or egotistic speeches , is of rare occurrence in the world . To test therefore the genuineness of benevolence , we have to consider its motive , as exemplified by the method , of its action , and this test vindicates the singleness of Masonic philanthropy . It is discharged by each singly , —the individual not waiting for collective encouragement , — towards the necessitous , under the tie of mutual fidelity , and to the honour of the Universal liulcr . Obligation in * Gay ' s Italics , with Annotations hy Octavius Freire Owen , M . A . F . S . A ., Hector of Burstow , Surrey . London : G . Houtledgo and Co .

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