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  • Aug. 25, 1860
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, Aug. 25, 1860: Page 10

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    Article MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. ← Page 2 of 2
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Page 10

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Masonic Notes And Queries.

of tho book . It , hoivever , has one value , viz ., to show the excitement occasioned by the Morgan case in America , ivhich ivas so great that numbers of American Masons seceded from Masonry , and published all they knew of its mysteries , but a reaction at length set in , and those who were duped by the revelations of the soccders at length asked themselves this question : If men have sworn such

oaths never to reveal these things , they must bo perjurers , and no dependence can be placed upon the oaths they now swear that these are the secrets of Masonry . ' To such a pitch did the secession arrive at one time , that there was scarcely an American Lodge which did not have somo of its members enrolled amongst the false brethren , and they loried in acknowledging their infamy . Well may the

g Masons of Europe look with suspicion on all American Masons and Masonry . " Such were our words , and wc adhere to them , despite the assertion of the quotation , which says , "this is simply false , " for it is honestly true . We are not about to shift . our ground , but we cannot forbear to ask a question—one that has never been answered by the American Masons . What did become

of Morgan ? Ho was last seen in the company of certain Masons , and no man ever saw him afterwards . What then is the inference ? We draw ours from thc reports of the trials at the timo , and fully believe , he ivas made away with by some of the rash party who had him in their poiver . And

now * to return to tho matter in hand , and shew that ive do know something of the subject upon which we write . At the time of the Morgan affair , aud shortly after , there wero no less than thirty-six newspapers , magazines , and reviews , which ive have seen , how * many more " there were , wo cannot pretend to know , in which Anti-Masonry was the leading principle . In many of those , there were the fullest

and most minute disclosures , which ought never to have been published . Rituals and guides-books swarmed from the press , and one of them especially , au American Brother pointed out to us as being a text book in Lodges at the present hour . Will the writer of the above challenge us to point out to him ten printed rituals of American Masonry ? If so , we will oblige him and stake our credit on their being

essentially the same as thc text book alluded to in the last sentence . Our opponent is certainly pleading a very curious case . He states " the European Masons do not now entertain those susjricions ; " from ivhich we infer that they did then mistrust . We have no desire to introduce airy mischief , great or smait ; our business is with facts , those stubborn things which cannot bo explained away , however much it miht suit

g the writer of thc extract to gloss the matter over , and we can scarcely suppress a suspicion that much of the virtuous indignation expressed owes its influence to a question hinging on the almighty dollar : viz ., the propriety of so much publication as our American brethren indulge in . ]

1 US 0 NIC GRAVE STONE . Can any of our Brethren in Cheltenham favour me , through your MAGAZINE , with a copy of thc superscription in cypher at the top of the Stone in St . Mary ' s Churchyard , which covers the remains of Bro . Wm . Quantril , a poor actor , who died thero . Tho Stone is there , but thc superscription has been washed off by the pitiless storm , years ago . —It . E . X .

GOOD-FELLOWSHIP IN THE IUSKS . — " The first might be a peer , the second a working man , the third a shopkeeper , the fourth a yeoman , the fifth a captain in the Guards , and so on . There they stood , shoulder to shoulder , intent on the same object , to test their skill in a generous rivalry ; and the Volunteer uniform showed no difference . You will see the Times , in giving the names does the same . It was the old public school custom over again , and is a sure sign of healthy feeling . Men stood upon their merits alonetheir

, personal merits , in the use of the rifle . Besides , the intermixture of classes did more ; it showed us to each other , and we found the mind ofthe gentleman was common to all . It was 'Pair play and old England ; ' each man did his best , without striving after any small advantages . We stood upon honour with each other , and it was not long before there was great clan-ship amongst us—just like the old feeling of sides at cricket and footballandin ite of our

, , sp individual rivalry , we cheered a successful shot as reflecting credit on the squad . ' " XVell clone Johnson , ' ' Well done Bud-shorn , ' when they got centres . And so high did did this run , that , at the close of the day , we wished to challenge any of the squads and had there been time , no doubt plenty of matches 11 o ild have come off . "

Literature.

Literature .

REVIEW . Memorials of Thomas Hood . By ins Sox AJ * D DATTGHTEI ! . 2 Vols . Edivaad Moxon , London . These volumes are the warm heart-gushing tribute of two devoted children to a parent , who must have been such a father as it falls to

the lot of few of human kind to possess . The name of Thomas Hood is enough to conjure up all that is ideal in large-hearted liberality . He was a poet , whose poetry was the offspring of the heart , and whose feelings were those of a man loving and beloved . It has been often said that near relatives are not the best biographers , but , in the books before us , we prefer the loving , tender ,

ancl respectful treatment of a good man's offspring , to the most eloquent life that could have been written by the ablest word-painter n the world . In these Memorials we have the filial love of a son and daughter , not seeking to heighten a parent's feme , p . irdonable though the attempt might be , by any of the arts of writing , but by a simple , and touching narrative of a pure , holy , and blameless

life doing more to perpetuate the name , and virtues , of a man whose sympathies were always enlisted on the side of poor humanity , than any other biographer could hope to achieve . Thomas Hood is here presented to us as he lived . The Memorials are those which chiefly fell from his own hand when fighting day by clay with sickness and adversity ; }* et long-suffering , loving ,

laughing , hopeful , and happy , with a mind over-burthened with care , and a body which seemed to be the inheritance of some lifelong disease ; in whose nature was engrafted the principle

to"Suffer anil be strong . " Hood ' s connection with literature was his earliest and only occupation , and although be experienced some treatment which was discouraging , ancl bad to combat with misfortunes — which his daughter hints were the fault of others—still he clung to the pursuit . And the public did recognise his abilities , but bis literary labours , owing to the causes before mentioned , were not

proportionably rewarded to his merits . As if this was not trial enough for such a philosopher , ho underwent a life of weakness and suffering j and there is scarcely a page of these Memorials which does not tell us such a tale of physical prostration , tlmt it is wonderful how he could have borne up through it . He was eminently domestic in his tastes , indeed , his bodily

health would allow no other course , and his gentle and affectionate nature rendered it the most agreeable solace to his mind , for what other panacea could bo found for one that declared . " I'm sick of gruel , ancl the dietetics ; " I'm sick of pills , and sicker of emetics ; " I'm sick of pulses' tardiness or quickness ; " I'm sick of blood , its thinness or its thickness ;—"In short , within a word I'm sick of sickness . "

13 ut ho had the good fortune to be watched over , and understood by a loving wife , and nobly does he express to her the treasure that she proved to him . In one of his letters he bears witness to her unappreciable worth in these words : — " I never was anything , dearest , till I knew * you—and I have been a better , happier , and more prosperous man ever since . Lay

by that truth in lavender , sweetest , and remind me of it when I fail . I am writing warmly and fondly ; but not without good cause . First , your own affectionate letter , lately received—next the remembrance of our dear children , pledges—what darling Ones ! —of our old familiar love , —then a delicious impulse to pour out tlio overflowings of my heart into yours ; and last , not least , the knowledge that your dear eyes will react what my hand is now writing . Perhaps there is an after-thought thatwhatever may

, bef . il me , the wife of my bosom will have this acknowledgement of her tenderness—worth—excellence—all that is wifely or womanly , from my pen . " From the above it is evident that what Hood wrote , so was his life . His pathos is never more intense than wiien he is ^ writing of tlie charms of home and the joys and sorrows of the claims of domestic

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1860-08-25, Page 10” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 15 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_25081860/page/10/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
NORTH RIDING OF YORK INFIRMARY. Article 1
CLASSICAL THEOLOGY.—XXX. Article 2
MASONIC JOTTINGS FROM ABROAD. Article 3
ARCHITECTURE AND ARCHÆOLOGY. Article 4
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 9
Literature. Article 10
Poetry. Article 12
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART. Article 13
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 14
METROPOLITAN. Article 14
PROVINCIAL. Article 15
ROYAL ARCH. Article 16
NEW SOUTH WALES. Article 17
THE WEEK. Article 19
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 20
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Masonic Notes And Queries.

of tho book . It , hoivever , has one value , viz ., to show the excitement occasioned by the Morgan case in America , ivhich ivas so great that numbers of American Masons seceded from Masonry , and published all they knew of its mysteries , but a reaction at length set in , and those who were duped by the revelations of the soccders at length asked themselves this question : If men have sworn such

oaths never to reveal these things , they must bo perjurers , and no dependence can be placed upon the oaths they now swear that these are the secrets of Masonry . ' To such a pitch did the secession arrive at one time , that there was scarcely an American Lodge which did not have somo of its members enrolled amongst the false brethren , and they loried in acknowledging their infamy . Well may the

g Masons of Europe look with suspicion on all American Masons and Masonry . " Such were our words , and wc adhere to them , despite the assertion of the quotation , which says , "this is simply false , " for it is honestly true . We are not about to shift . our ground , but we cannot forbear to ask a question—one that has never been answered by the American Masons . What did become

of Morgan ? Ho was last seen in the company of certain Masons , and no man ever saw him afterwards . What then is the inference ? We draw ours from thc reports of the trials at the timo , and fully believe , he ivas made away with by some of the rash party who had him in their poiver . And

now * to return to tho matter in hand , and shew that ive do know something of the subject upon which we write . At the time of the Morgan affair , aud shortly after , there wero no less than thirty-six newspapers , magazines , and reviews , which ive have seen , how * many more " there were , wo cannot pretend to know , in which Anti-Masonry was the leading principle . In many of those , there were the fullest

and most minute disclosures , which ought never to have been published . Rituals and guides-books swarmed from the press , and one of them especially , au American Brother pointed out to us as being a text book in Lodges at the present hour . Will the writer of the above challenge us to point out to him ten printed rituals of American Masonry ? If so , we will oblige him and stake our credit on their being

essentially the same as thc text book alluded to in the last sentence . Our opponent is certainly pleading a very curious case . He states " the European Masons do not now entertain those susjricions ; " from ivhich we infer that they did then mistrust . We have no desire to introduce airy mischief , great or smait ; our business is with facts , those stubborn things which cannot bo explained away , however much it miht suit

g the writer of thc extract to gloss the matter over , and we can scarcely suppress a suspicion that much of the virtuous indignation expressed owes its influence to a question hinging on the almighty dollar : viz ., the propriety of so much publication as our American brethren indulge in . ]

1 US 0 NIC GRAVE STONE . Can any of our Brethren in Cheltenham favour me , through your MAGAZINE , with a copy of thc superscription in cypher at the top of the Stone in St . Mary ' s Churchyard , which covers the remains of Bro . Wm . Quantril , a poor actor , who died thero . Tho Stone is there , but thc superscription has been washed off by the pitiless storm , years ago . —It . E . X .

GOOD-FELLOWSHIP IN THE IUSKS . — " The first might be a peer , the second a working man , the third a shopkeeper , the fourth a yeoman , the fifth a captain in the Guards , and so on . There they stood , shoulder to shoulder , intent on the same object , to test their skill in a generous rivalry ; and the Volunteer uniform showed no difference . You will see the Times , in giving the names does the same . It was the old public school custom over again , and is a sure sign of healthy feeling . Men stood upon their merits alonetheir

, personal merits , in the use of the rifle . Besides , the intermixture of classes did more ; it showed us to each other , and we found the mind ofthe gentleman was common to all . It was 'Pair play and old England ; ' each man did his best , without striving after any small advantages . We stood upon honour with each other , and it was not long before there was great clan-ship amongst us—just like the old feeling of sides at cricket and footballandin ite of our

, , sp individual rivalry , we cheered a successful shot as reflecting credit on the squad . ' " XVell clone Johnson , ' ' Well done Bud-shorn , ' when they got centres . And so high did did this run , that , at the close of the day , we wished to challenge any of the squads and had there been time , no doubt plenty of matches 11 o ild have come off . "

Literature.

Literature .

REVIEW . Memorials of Thomas Hood . By ins Sox AJ * D DATTGHTEI ! . 2 Vols . Edivaad Moxon , London . These volumes are the warm heart-gushing tribute of two devoted children to a parent , who must have been such a father as it falls to

the lot of few of human kind to possess . The name of Thomas Hood is enough to conjure up all that is ideal in large-hearted liberality . He was a poet , whose poetry was the offspring of the heart , and whose feelings were those of a man loving and beloved . It has been often said that near relatives are not the best biographers , but , in the books before us , we prefer the loving , tender ,

ancl respectful treatment of a good man's offspring , to the most eloquent life that could have been written by the ablest word-painter n the world . In these Memorials we have the filial love of a son and daughter , not seeking to heighten a parent's feme , p . irdonable though the attempt might be , by any of the arts of writing , but by a simple , and touching narrative of a pure , holy , and blameless

life doing more to perpetuate the name , and virtues , of a man whose sympathies were always enlisted on the side of poor humanity , than any other biographer could hope to achieve . Thomas Hood is here presented to us as he lived . The Memorials are those which chiefly fell from his own hand when fighting day by clay with sickness and adversity ; }* et long-suffering , loving ,

laughing , hopeful , and happy , with a mind over-burthened with care , and a body which seemed to be the inheritance of some lifelong disease ; in whose nature was engrafted the principle

to"Suffer anil be strong . " Hood ' s connection with literature was his earliest and only occupation , and although be experienced some treatment which was discouraging , ancl bad to combat with misfortunes — which his daughter hints were the fault of others—still he clung to the pursuit . And the public did recognise his abilities , but bis literary labours , owing to the causes before mentioned , were not

proportionably rewarded to his merits . As if this was not trial enough for such a philosopher , ho underwent a life of weakness and suffering j and there is scarcely a page of these Memorials which does not tell us such a tale of physical prostration , tlmt it is wonderful how he could have borne up through it . He was eminently domestic in his tastes , indeed , his bodily

health would allow no other course , and his gentle and affectionate nature rendered it the most agreeable solace to his mind , for what other panacea could bo found for one that declared . " I'm sick of gruel , ancl the dietetics ; " I'm sick of pills , and sicker of emetics ; " I'm sick of pulses' tardiness or quickness ; " I'm sick of blood , its thinness or its thickness ;—"In short , within a word I'm sick of sickness . "

13 ut ho had the good fortune to be watched over , and understood by a loving wife , and nobly does he express to her the treasure that she proved to him . In one of his letters he bears witness to her unappreciable worth in these words : — " I never was anything , dearest , till I knew * you—and I have been a better , happier , and more prosperous man ever since . Lay

by that truth in lavender , sweetest , and remind me of it when I fail . I am writing warmly and fondly ; but not without good cause . First , your own affectionate letter , lately received—next the remembrance of our dear children , pledges—what darling Ones ! —of our old familiar love , —then a delicious impulse to pour out tlio overflowings of my heart into yours ; and last , not least , the knowledge that your dear eyes will react what my hand is now writing . Perhaps there is an after-thought thatwhatever may

, bef . il me , the wife of my bosom will have this acknowledgement of her tenderness—worth—excellence—all that is wifely or womanly , from my pen . " From the above it is evident that what Hood wrote , so was his life . His pathos is never more intense than wiien he is ^ writing of tlie charms of home and the joys and sorrows of the claims of domestic

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