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  • The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine
  • July 9, 1859
  • Page 16
  • FREEMASONRY AND ODD FELLOWSHIP.
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, July 9, 1859: Page 16

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Correspondence.

CORRESPONDENCE .

——? [ THE EDITOR does not hold himself responsible for any ojiinimis entertained by Correspondents . ' ] BRO . BINCKES'S FAKEWELL .

TO THE EDITOll OF THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE AND MASONIC MIEROII . SIR AND BROTHER , —So thoroughly and determinedly disingenuous is the treatment to which all who venture to differ from you and your august patrons are subjected , that I shall decline to employ either reason or argument in contravention of the malicious insinuations and malignant criticisms which form the staple of your two last numbers . The of the most acute logician

powers avail nothing with those who stubbornly disregard proof ancl demonstration , and certainly in my weak hands such simple weapons as truth and fact are as nought when contending against arrogance and power . I will admit , if you like , that by taking a prominent part in recent discussions , and by trespassing upon your columns from time to time with " worthless lucubrations" I have rendered

my , myself amenable to , if I havo not invited , criticism and remark . " Those who play at bowls , must expect rubbers , " and I should not for one moment complain if I had met with anything like fair plaj- or common candour . In place of this , however , what is the course you have for some time past systematically adopted ? I repeat , in spite of your disclaimer and that of " Your Reporter , " whose contemptible effusion I dismiss altogether from further

notice , as ere lie penned it he must have partaken largely " of the insane root that takes the reason prisoner "—that you have wilfully perverted nry meaning—that you have constantly attributed to me motives and . intentions which never entered iny mind—that you have endeavoured now and again to make me the butt of your harmless pleasantry and innocuous ridicule—that you have , whether intentionallor not I forbear to an inion

y express op , given unfair and partial reports of what I have said—that many things have been attributed to me which I never did say—that you have thought proper to denounce ancl abuse me in the most unmeasured terms , for simply wishing to set myself right when I have been misrepresented—and , in short , that you have in every respect acted as the unscrupulous agent of a powerful and

unscrupulous " party "—ancl all this while professing to be governed by the principles of charity and brotherly love . Unfortunately my name lias appeared too often in your pages ; but it has been , because , while unable to keep silence under tbe continued provocation offered to that " party" ( if you will have it so ) , of ivhich I am a member , I could not " stab men i' the dark , " nor coward like shield myself under the refuge of an anonyme . I will ,

however , promise you one thing , and that is , that so long as matters remain as they are , my name shall be struck out of the list of your correspondents , and that if 3 'ou have the honesty to insert this personal defence , and choose therefore to inflict a chastisement more severe than any preceding one , I will not retaliate . Briefly , then—thus to avoid misunderstanding , or the imputation that I have shirked any questions at issue between us—I have not

a single assertion to withdraw , or one statement to qualify . Well , indeed , may you wish to draw a veil over the latter portion of the proceedings of the Special Grand Lodge of 2 : 3 rd ult . Rarely , indeed , has such an exhibition of petulance , ill-regulated temper , and offensive demeanour , been witnessed in Grancl Lodge as that afforded by Bro . Havers on the occasion in question . "What would have been the fate , under similar circumstances , of any

member of the newly-denominated " Club party , " one shudders lo imagine . I suppose , however , that what in a cherished member of the executive is " but a , choleric word , " is in one of the obnoxious "faction , " "downright bksphenry . " Then , again , how pitiful were the accents in ivhich the President of the Board of General Purposes narrated the martyrdom he bad undergone , " I have been vilifiedwritten againstspoken against" & c & c

, , , , . as if he had never himself meted out similar measure to others . Let your own pages bear witness to tbe systematic persecution with which Bro . Havers , in season and out , of season , has visited all those who by opposing his policy have earned for themselves the title of " factious . " Without wishing exactly to apply the quotation , I could not help , while listening , being forcibly reminded of a quasi ill us-

Correspondence.

tnous potentate , who is represented as taking a part in a somewhat important debate : — ' ' - ' On the other side uprose in act graceful and humane . he seemed In dignity composed and high exploit ; But all was false and hollow : tho' his tongue

Dropt manna , ancl could make the worse appear The better reason , to perplex ancl dark Maturest counsels ;"— Suffer me to conclude with a quotation or two from a popular author , ivhich appearing in the first number of your new , and I hope reformed , series , may afford some consolation to earnest , conscientious , and well-abused men : —

' It is a rare instance of virtue to despise censure which we do not deserve ; and still more rare to despise praise , which we do . " ' " In the tortuous and crooked policy of public affairs , as well as in the less extensive , but perhaps more intricate labyrinth of private concerns there are two evils , which must continue to be as remediless as they are unfortunate ; they have no end , and their only palliatives are diffidence and time . They are these—The most candid ancl enlightened must ive their assent to a probable falsehoodrather than to an

img , probable truth ; ancl their esteem to those who have a reputation'in preference to those who only deserve it . " Recent events notwithstanding , I have to thank you for some courtesies in times past , which I now beg gratefully to acknowledge . And so I bid you heartily farewell , J . am , Sir and Brother , yours fraternally , London , J-ulii 2 » rf . 1859 . ' FREDK . BINCKES .

[ vv e do not wish to quarrel with Bro . Binckes , but we might take exception to such terms as " malicious insinuations , " " malignant criticisms , " " unscrupulous agent , " & c , & c , being used by one who takes us to task for want of brotherly love ; but as irate brothers cannot hel p being abusive , we let it pass . There is one remark , however , which we must make ; in our Number of the

22 nd June , Bro . Binckes accused us of misreporting a certain speech oi' his , and lie now repeats the charge . We have , since he first made the charge , had the opportunity of reading a report of Bro . Binckes ' s speech in the publication with which it is well known that he is connected and ice find that report corresponds , word for wordwilli thai ivhich ice . paMished . Surely if we were in

, error Bro . Binckes might have corrected his speech before allowing it- to be republished in a journal of whicli he is acknowledged to be one of tbe conductors . AVe would also remind Bro . Binckes that in speaking of his " lucubrations , " we did nofc prefix the acljeo--tivc—Eo . ]

Freemasonry And Odd Fellowship.

FREEMASONRY AND ODD FELLOWSHIP .

TO THE EDITOR OE THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE AND MASONIC MIRROR . DEAR SIR AND BROTHER , —I have this moment seen in your number of yesterday , the remarks in your Architectural Chapter in reply to Bro . Tweddell ' s letter , and further holding up to reprobation the conduct of those Leicester Freemasons who , as such , accepted an invitation to dine at the recent annual meeting

of the Manchester Unity of Odd Fellows . Although I perceive that you have in your hands for publication a letter from Bro . Clephan , in reply to your former strictures on this subject , 1 cannot allow the departure of a single post without troubling you with a few remarks , ancl stating that the reprobation of tbe fraternity , if such be deserved , must fall upon myself and the AVorshipful Master and brethren of St . John ' s Lodge , No . 348 , of Gaunt Lod

as well as upon Bro . Clephan and the John ge - for , if guilt there be , we are all equally criminal . Indeed , Bro . Editor , " I may be said to be " the very head ancl front of the offence , " for ^ not only did 1 , like other members of the Order , nccept this invitation , ' but it devolved on me officially to return thanks for the toast of "The Bight Hon . Earl Howe , Prov . Grand Masterand the honourable Order of Freemasons . "

, Jf the censure you have passed upon us be deserved , we must bow to it and bear it with the best grace we can ; but I . conceive you have looked at the affair from a wrong point of view ; at all events you have given a colouring to it very different to that in which it appeared to the Leicester brethren . The facts of tlie case are simply these : — A deputation of the local committee ol Odd Fellows waited

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1859-07-09, Page 16” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 23 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_09071859/page/16/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
Untitled Article 2
ADDRESS. Article 3
Untitled Article 4
TO THE CRAFT. Article 8
STAINED GLASS. Article 8
Untitled Article 11
DAISIES. Article 11
MASONIC MISSIONS. Article 12
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 15
FREEMASONRY AND ODD FELLOWSHIP. Article 16
THE JOHN OF GAUNT LODGE AND THE ODD FELLOWS. Article 17
ODD FELLOWSHIP. Article 17
"MASONIC MISSIONS." Article 18
"JUSTITIA" AND BRO, GARROD. Article 19
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 19
PROVINCIAL. Article 20
ROYAL ARCH. Article 24
KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. Article 24
ANCIENT AND ACCEPTED RITE. Article 24
IRELAND. Article 25
COLONIAL. Article 25
THE WEEK. Article 25
Obituary. Article 27
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 27
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Correspondence.

CORRESPONDENCE .

——? [ THE EDITOR does not hold himself responsible for any ojiinimis entertained by Correspondents . ' ] BRO . BINCKES'S FAKEWELL .

TO THE EDITOll OF THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE AND MASONIC MIEROII . SIR AND BROTHER , —So thoroughly and determinedly disingenuous is the treatment to which all who venture to differ from you and your august patrons are subjected , that I shall decline to employ either reason or argument in contravention of the malicious insinuations and malignant criticisms which form the staple of your two last numbers . The of the most acute logician

powers avail nothing with those who stubbornly disregard proof ancl demonstration , and certainly in my weak hands such simple weapons as truth and fact are as nought when contending against arrogance and power . I will admit , if you like , that by taking a prominent part in recent discussions , and by trespassing upon your columns from time to time with " worthless lucubrations" I have rendered

my , myself amenable to , if I havo not invited , criticism and remark . " Those who play at bowls , must expect rubbers , " and I should not for one moment complain if I had met with anything like fair plaj- or common candour . In place of this , however , what is the course you have for some time past systematically adopted ? I repeat , in spite of your disclaimer and that of " Your Reporter , " whose contemptible effusion I dismiss altogether from further

notice , as ere lie penned it he must have partaken largely " of the insane root that takes the reason prisoner "—that you have wilfully perverted nry meaning—that you have constantly attributed to me motives and . intentions which never entered iny mind—that you have endeavoured now and again to make me the butt of your harmless pleasantry and innocuous ridicule—that you have , whether intentionallor not I forbear to an inion

y express op , given unfair and partial reports of what I have said—that many things have been attributed to me which I never did say—that you have thought proper to denounce ancl abuse me in the most unmeasured terms , for simply wishing to set myself right when I have been misrepresented—and , in short , that you have in every respect acted as the unscrupulous agent of a powerful and

unscrupulous " party "—ancl all this while professing to be governed by the principles of charity and brotherly love . Unfortunately my name lias appeared too often in your pages ; but it has been , because , while unable to keep silence under tbe continued provocation offered to that " party" ( if you will have it so ) , of ivhich I am a member , I could not " stab men i' the dark , " nor coward like shield myself under the refuge of an anonyme . I will ,

however , promise you one thing , and that is , that so long as matters remain as they are , my name shall be struck out of the list of your correspondents , and that if 3 'ou have the honesty to insert this personal defence , and choose therefore to inflict a chastisement more severe than any preceding one , I will not retaliate . Briefly , then—thus to avoid misunderstanding , or the imputation that I have shirked any questions at issue between us—I have not

a single assertion to withdraw , or one statement to qualify . Well , indeed , may you wish to draw a veil over the latter portion of the proceedings of the Special Grand Lodge of 2 : 3 rd ult . Rarely , indeed , has such an exhibition of petulance , ill-regulated temper , and offensive demeanour , been witnessed in Grancl Lodge as that afforded by Bro . Havers on the occasion in question . "What would have been the fate , under similar circumstances , of any

member of the newly-denominated " Club party , " one shudders lo imagine . I suppose , however , that what in a cherished member of the executive is " but a , choleric word , " is in one of the obnoxious "faction , " "downright bksphenry . " Then , again , how pitiful were the accents in ivhich the President of the Board of General Purposes narrated the martyrdom he bad undergone , " I have been vilifiedwritten againstspoken against" & c & c

, , , , . as if he had never himself meted out similar measure to others . Let your own pages bear witness to tbe systematic persecution with which Bro . Havers , in season and out , of season , has visited all those who by opposing his policy have earned for themselves the title of " factious . " Without wishing exactly to apply the quotation , I could not help , while listening , being forcibly reminded of a quasi ill us-

Correspondence.

tnous potentate , who is represented as taking a part in a somewhat important debate : — ' ' - ' On the other side uprose in act graceful and humane . he seemed In dignity composed and high exploit ; But all was false and hollow : tho' his tongue

Dropt manna , ancl could make the worse appear The better reason , to perplex ancl dark Maturest counsels ;"— Suffer me to conclude with a quotation or two from a popular author , ivhich appearing in the first number of your new , and I hope reformed , series , may afford some consolation to earnest , conscientious , and well-abused men : —

' It is a rare instance of virtue to despise censure which we do not deserve ; and still more rare to despise praise , which we do . " ' " In the tortuous and crooked policy of public affairs , as well as in the less extensive , but perhaps more intricate labyrinth of private concerns there are two evils , which must continue to be as remediless as they are unfortunate ; they have no end , and their only palliatives are diffidence and time . They are these—The most candid ancl enlightened must ive their assent to a probable falsehoodrather than to an

img , probable truth ; ancl their esteem to those who have a reputation'in preference to those who only deserve it . " Recent events notwithstanding , I have to thank you for some courtesies in times past , which I now beg gratefully to acknowledge . And so I bid you heartily farewell , J . am , Sir and Brother , yours fraternally , London , J-ulii 2 » rf . 1859 . ' FREDK . BINCKES .

[ vv e do not wish to quarrel with Bro . Binckes , but we might take exception to such terms as " malicious insinuations , " " malignant criticisms , " " unscrupulous agent , " & c , & c , being used by one who takes us to task for want of brotherly love ; but as irate brothers cannot hel p being abusive , we let it pass . There is one remark , however , which we must make ; in our Number of the

22 nd June , Bro . Binckes accused us of misreporting a certain speech oi' his , and lie now repeats the charge . We have , since he first made the charge , had the opportunity of reading a report of Bro . Binckes ' s speech in the publication with which it is well known that he is connected and ice find that report corresponds , word for wordwilli thai ivhich ice . paMished . Surely if we were in

, error Bro . Binckes might have corrected his speech before allowing it- to be republished in a journal of whicli he is acknowledged to be one of tbe conductors . AVe would also remind Bro . Binckes that in speaking of his " lucubrations , " we did nofc prefix the acljeo--tivc—Eo . ]

Freemasonry And Odd Fellowship.

FREEMASONRY AND ODD FELLOWSHIP .

TO THE EDITOR OE THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE AND MASONIC MIRROR . DEAR SIR AND BROTHER , —I have this moment seen in your number of yesterday , the remarks in your Architectural Chapter in reply to Bro . Tweddell ' s letter , and further holding up to reprobation the conduct of those Leicester Freemasons who , as such , accepted an invitation to dine at the recent annual meeting

of the Manchester Unity of Odd Fellows . Although I perceive that you have in your hands for publication a letter from Bro . Clephan , in reply to your former strictures on this subject , 1 cannot allow the departure of a single post without troubling you with a few remarks , ancl stating that the reprobation of tbe fraternity , if such be deserved , must fall upon myself and the AVorshipful Master and brethren of St . John ' s Lodge , No . 348 , of Gaunt Lod

as well as upon Bro . Clephan and the John ge - for , if guilt there be , we are all equally criminal . Indeed , Bro . Editor , " I may be said to be " the very head ancl front of the offence , " for ^ not only did 1 , like other members of the Order , nccept this invitation , ' but it devolved on me officially to return thanks for the toast of "The Bight Hon . Earl Howe , Prov . Grand Masterand the honourable Order of Freemasons . "

, Jf the censure you have passed upon us be deserved , we must bow to it and bear it with the best grace we can ; but I . conceive you have looked at the affair from a wrong point of view ; at all events you have given a colouring to it very different to that in which it appeared to the Leicester brethren . The facts of tlie case are simply these : — A deputation of the local committee ol Odd Fellows waited

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