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  • June 20, 1857
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  • INSTALLATION OF THE EARL OF CARNARVON AS W. M. OF THE WESTMINSTER AND KEYSTONE LODGE , No. 10.
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Installation Of The Earl Of Carnarvon As W. M. Of The Westminster And Keystone Lodge , No. 10.

like that of Great Britain .. Of the Craft , I will say that it is , to our eyes , the embodiment of all that is ancient , sacred , and venerable . ( Hear , hear , and cheers . ) There is no good Mason who is not also at the same time a true and loyal subject ; and I am quite sure that her Majesty , having the support of the Brethren of the COO Lodges which are in England , may rest in greater security than if surrounded by the bayonets of ten thousand legions . I give you , ' The Queen and the Craft . '" The toast having been drunk with enthusiasm

, The W . M . next said : " Brethren , I know but of one toast that can legitimately follow the one which we have just now pledged , aud that is the Grand Master of England , the Earl of Zetland , who now sits at my right hand . ( Great applause . ) When I think of the intimacy which has existed between his lordship ' s family and mine , and of which he and I have been talking during dinner , I can only say that I most cordially join in the applause and enthusiasm with which his lordship ' s name has been receivedaud I venture to think that there

; is not one Mason present who will not feel proud to do honour to the Grand Master of England . ( Hear , hear . ) Out of the sphere of public life there is , in my opinion , no position in society which carries with it so high an honour , and at the same time so high a responsibility . When I find , superadded to all this , personal courtesy , kindness , aud consideration for the opinions of others , I may venture to say that his lordship is to the Order the ornamental and graceful capital that adorns the substantial column . Let me then give you

' The Grand Master of England . '" ( Cheers . ) The toast having been duly honoured , The Most Worshipful the Grand Master rose to reply to the compliment , and said : "Worshipful Master , Bro . S . W ., Bro . J . W ., and Brethren , I return you my grateful thanks for the kind manner in which you have drunk my health ; I assure you , Brethren , that I thank the W . M . most sincerely for the kind and flattering manner hi which lie has introduced name to It is to me a source of

my you . the greatest gratification to be present on this occasion , and I feel grateful for the honour you have done me in making mo the guest of so distinguished a Lodge as the Westminster and Keystone . I attended at the working of the Lodge , and I cannot find words to express the gratification I felt at seeing the business of the evening gone through in so able and impressive a manner by Bro . Beach . ( Hear , hear . ) It is also , Brethren , most gratifying to me to be

present when I can congratulate the Lodge on selecting such a Master as my noble friend in the chair . The W . M . has kindly alluded to tho intimacy which has existed between his family and mine . It is not only because his lordship is one for whose family and connections I feel a great interest and affection that I hold the dignity which he has this night attained to be but an instalment of the honours to be hereafter conferred upon him , but because of his high character and the able and talented manner in which ho has hitherto performed the duties which have devolved himHis installation this night is

upon . not only an ornament to the Lodge , but a happy omen of its prosperity . It is with much gratification and pleasure that I see him in the position he now occupies , and I feel it a high honour to be received among you , in so flattering a maimer , on such an auspicious occasion as this evening . " ( Cheers . ) The W . M . then said : "I beg now to give you the next toast in point of dignity , 'The Grand Officers of England . ' It is , Brethren , with peculiar pleasure I bail amongst us the presence of so many of

those officers in the blaze of purple , and the glare of jewels , which dim into insignificance those symbolical stars overhead , but which recall to us that there are dignitaries and rulers in the Craft whose services entitle them to our eulogy . But there is at the head of those Grand Officers one whose name I will join with this toast , my noble friend and Brother who sits 011 my left . ( Cheers . ) My noble friend has been lately appointed to the second office in the Craft , and therefore let usthe members of the Westminster and Keystone Lodge

, , assure him that it gives us the sincerest gratification that one so distinguished for his administrative talents elsewhere should consent to take part in the Government of our Order . I hope , however , that as War Minister he will not drill us too severely . ( Laughter . ) At all events , when he is speaking , I will be always at attention . ( Great laughter . ) As my noble friend comes from the Land of Cakes , we bail his presence here this evcjiing , not only as D . G . M . of England , but because he symbolizes to us that union , concord , and friendly relationswhich should exist between the Grand of

, always Lodges the two countries . In former times it was customary in Scotland that the G . M . should succeed to that honour by heriditary right , but the nobleman who had that right—and I know of no higher honour which a subject of this realm can enjoy—of his own accord resigned it , as he thought that those only were fit to hold high places who were able to discharge the duties which belonged to them . I must make one allusion more to Scotland . A Scotch king , once , when entertaining foreigners from more sunny climes in his drear and cold

dominions ( I say this without the least disrespect to Scotland ) , was , for want of hot-water plates , in some embarrassment , but got ont ol it in this manner . When the guests arrived , they each one found a handful of Scotch gold coins beneath his plate . Now , when my noble friend comes to dine with us , lie must be content with a less ambitious entertainment than that , but he shall have the best cheer we can afford him , and bettor than that , he shall have the heartiest possible welcome . Brethren , I call on you to drink ' The health of Lord PanmureD . G . M . of Englandand that of the other Grand Officers . '"

, , Lord Panmure ( the applause which accompanied tho mention of his name having subsided ) said : '' W . M . and Brethren , for myself and in the name of my colleagues in office , I return you my sincere thanks for the maimer in which you have received and honoured the last toast . The Grand Officers of England have , I think , done honour to themselves in accepting the invitation of this Lodge to witness so gratifying a scene as that presented to us this evening . ( Hear , hear . ) We have seen a Lodge not only numerous from its members ,

but most highly respectable from their talents and position in society , install as its master one of the young and rising statesmen of the day ( hear , heai' ); and we have partaken of a hospitality , not tho less royal because wo have not , as at the banquet given by the king of Scotland , to which the W . M . has alluded , found the gold coins beneath our napkins . We have , I say , enjoyed one of the most hospitable receptions . ( Cheers ) I see at the Board many of the Grand Officers of England , and I am not saying more than the truth , when

I say I see them filling places to which every Mason in the Craft may legitimately aspire , just as there is in this Lodge no office to which tho Brethren , by diligence in the Craft , and by those accomplishments of which they may feel justly proud , may not in proper time aspire . ( Hear , hear . ) I thought when my noble Brother the W . M . gave the toast of the' Grand Officers , ' he would have spared all allusion to any office I may hold elsewhere ; but he has shown himself not only a great master in the Craftbut also a craftMason ( Cheers and

, y . laughter . ) He said that . he hoped I would not be too severe in my drill , but promised for himself that he should be always at attention . I can only say that no drill can be effective in which the troops do not sometimes stand at ease . ( Laughter . ) He shall find mine a very mild rule indeed . Except when the dignity of the Craft requires the contrary , my word of command shall be 'March at ease . ' ( Cheers . ) I may now close these observations , and once more thank you for the honour yon have done us ; but as my noble friend

has alluded to the Grand Lodge of Scotland , I may be permitted , because by the favour of my noble friend , the Grand Master , i have the honour of holding the deputation of the Grand Lodge of England to that of Scotland , to say that I have always found tho greatest cordiality existing between the sister Grand Lodges . " Bro . Beach , M . P ., said : "M . W . G . M ., G . Officers , and Brethren , it is with much pleasure that I find myself privileged to have the opportunity of proposing to your notice the next toast ; I am sure will receive it with enthusiasm when I tell what it is— ' The

you you Brethren whom the M . W . the G . M . has delegated to represent him as Prov . G . M . ' s of the different Provinces . " ( Hear , hear , ) It must be evident to all that such appointments must bo very difficult ( hear ); and their importance cannot be exaggerated ,, because upon the efficiency of our Prov . G . Ms . depends in a very high degree the welfare of the Craft . ( Hear . ) Those appointments , moreover , are not confined to this our native land , but are extended over the entire surface of the globe . ( Cheers . ) The respect in which those Brethren

are universally held is the best practical proof of their efficiency , and of the care with which these appointments have been made . The skill and ability with which those Brethren have discharged their important duties do credit to the selection which the G . M . has made . ( Hear . ) I need only add that it is with the greatest pleasure that we see so many of them among 113 upon this interesting occasion . ( Hear , hear . ) And I call upon you to rise with becoming enthusiasm and to drink to the ProvGMscoupling with tho toast } ' The

. . ., ; health of Bro . Hall , the Prov . G . M . for Cambridgeshire . '" The toast having been duly honoured , Bro . Hall returned thanks . He said he felt some difficulty in returning thanks for that distinguished body to which he had the honour of belonging , and who had so numerously testified by their presence upon that interesting occasion the respect which they entertained for the noble lord the W . M . of that Lodge . ( Cheers . ) He felt bound to refer to the splendid hospitality of that eveningand to the cordial reception which they

, had given them , and he could only refer to it in the most complimentary manner . ( Hear , hear . ) He could hardly regard that as an ordinary Lodge Meeting ( hear ); he rather looked upon it as an important Masonic demonstration . ( Hear . ) They had around them Brethren of every rank in society . ( Hear . ) Ministers of the Cro , vn , noblemen and gentlemen of education and talent , men of fortune , and others who , not participating in those advantages , —all met there with one Masonic feeling , and threw aside all distinctions of rank except

“The Masonic Observer: 1857-06-20, Page 11” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 24 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mob/issues/mob_20061857/page/11/.
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Untitled Article 3
GRAND LODGE, JUNE 3rd, 1857. Article 3
THE EARL OF CARNARVON AT STONEHOUSE. Article 7
THE M. W. THE G. M. AT OXFORD. Article 8
INSTALLATION OF THE EARL OF CARNARVON AS W. M. OF THE WESTMINSTER AND KEYSTONE LODGE , No. 10. Article 10
MEETING OF MARK MASTERS. Article 13
GRAND MARK LODGE OF ENGLAND. Article 15
THE CANADIAN MOVEMENT. Article 15
REPORT FROM THE P. G. M. OF QUEBEC TO THE M. W. THE G. M. Article 17
Colonial. Article 18
Correspondence. Article 18
Untitled Article 19
FREEMASONS' BOYS' SCHOOL. Article 20
OXFORD FOOD AND OXFORD FLATTERY. Article 20
NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 20
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Installation Of The Earl Of Carnarvon As W. M. Of The Westminster And Keystone Lodge , No. 10.

like that of Great Britain .. Of the Craft , I will say that it is , to our eyes , the embodiment of all that is ancient , sacred , and venerable . ( Hear , hear , and cheers . ) There is no good Mason who is not also at the same time a true and loyal subject ; and I am quite sure that her Majesty , having the support of the Brethren of the COO Lodges which are in England , may rest in greater security than if surrounded by the bayonets of ten thousand legions . I give you , ' The Queen and the Craft . '" The toast having been drunk with enthusiasm

, The W . M . next said : " Brethren , I know but of one toast that can legitimately follow the one which we have just now pledged , aud that is the Grand Master of England , the Earl of Zetland , who now sits at my right hand . ( Great applause . ) When I think of the intimacy which has existed between his lordship ' s family and mine , and of which he and I have been talking during dinner , I can only say that I most cordially join in the applause and enthusiasm with which his lordship ' s name has been receivedaud I venture to think that there

; is not one Mason present who will not feel proud to do honour to the Grand Master of England . ( Hear , hear . ) Out of the sphere of public life there is , in my opinion , no position in society which carries with it so high an honour , and at the same time so high a responsibility . When I find , superadded to all this , personal courtesy , kindness , aud consideration for the opinions of others , I may venture to say that his lordship is to the Order the ornamental and graceful capital that adorns the substantial column . Let me then give you

' The Grand Master of England . '" ( Cheers . ) The toast having been duly honoured , The Most Worshipful the Grand Master rose to reply to the compliment , and said : "Worshipful Master , Bro . S . W ., Bro . J . W ., and Brethren , I return you my grateful thanks for the kind manner in which you have drunk my health ; I assure you , Brethren , that I thank the W . M . most sincerely for the kind and flattering manner hi which lie has introduced name to It is to me a source of

my you . the greatest gratification to be present on this occasion , and I feel grateful for the honour you have done me in making mo the guest of so distinguished a Lodge as the Westminster and Keystone . I attended at the working of the Lodge , and I cannot find words to express the gratification I felt at seeing the business of the evening gone through in so able and impressive a manner by Bro . Beach . ( Hear , hear . ) It is also , Brethren , most gratifying to me to be

present when I can congratulate the Lodge on selecting such a Master as my noble friend in the chair . The W . M . has kindly alluded to tho intimacy which has existed between his family and mine . It is not only because his lordship is one for whose family and connections I feel a great interest and affection that I hold the dignity which he has this night attained to be but an instalment of the honours to be hereafter conferred upon him , but because of his high character and the able and talented manner in which ho has hitherto performed the duties which have devolved himHis installation this night is

upon . not only an ornament to the Lodge , but a happy omen of its prosperity . It is with much gratification and pleasure that I see him in the position he now occupies , and I feel it a high honour to be received among you , in so flattering a maimer , on such an auspicious occasion as this evening . " ( Cheers . ) The W . M . then said : "I beg now to give you the next toast in point of dignity , 'The Grand Officers of England . ' It is , Brethren , with peculiar pleasure I bail amongst us the presence of so many of

those officers in the blaze of purple , and the glare of jewels , which dim into insignificance those symbolical stars overhead , but which recall to us that there are dignitaries and rulers in the Craft whose services entitle them to our eulogy . But there is at the head of those Grand Officers one whose name I will join with this toast , my noble friend and Brother who sits 011 my left . ( Cheers . ) My noble friend has been lately appointed to the second office in the Craft , and therefore let usthe members of the Westminster and Keystone Lodge

, , assure him that it gives us the sincerest gratification that one so distinguished for his administrative talents elsewhere should consent to take part in the Government of our Order . I hope , however , that as War Minister he will not drill us too severely . ( Laughter . ) At all events , when he is speaking , I will be always at attention . ( Great laughter . ) As my noble friend comes from the Land of Cakes , we bail his presence here this evcjiing , not only as D . G . M . of England , but because he symbolizes to us that union , concord , and friendly relationswhich should exist between the Grand of

, always Lodges the two countries . In former times it was customary in Scotland that the G . M . should succeed to that honour by heriditary right , but the nobleman who had that right—and I know of no higher honour which a subject of this realm can enjoy—of his own accord resigned it , as he thought that those only were fit to hold high places who were able to discharge the duties which belonged to them . I must make one allusion more to Scotland . A Scotch king , once , when entertaining foreigners from more sunny climes in his drear and cold

dominions ( I say this without the least disrespect to Scotland ) , was , for want of hot-water plates , in some embarrassment , but got ont ol it in this manner . When the guests arrived , they each one found a handful of Scotch gold coins beneath his plate . Now , when my noble friend comes to dine with us , lie must be content with a less ambitious entertainment than that , but he shall have the best cheer we can afford him , and bettor than that , he shall have the heartiest possible welcome . Brethren , I call on you to drink ' The health of Lord PanmureD . G . M . of Englandand that of the other Grand Officers . '"

, , Lord Panmure ( the applause which accompanied tho mention of his name having subsided ) said : '' W . M . and Brethren , for myself and in the name of my colleagues in office , I return you my sincere thanks for the maimer in which you have received and honoured the last toast . The Grand Officers of England have , I think , done honour to themselves in accepting the invitation of this Lodge to witness so gratifying a scene as that presented to us this evening . ( Hear , hear . ) We have seen a Lodge not only numerous from its members ,

but most highly respectable from their talents and position in society , install as its master one of the young and rising statesmen of the day ( hear , heai' ); and we have partaken of a hospitality , not tho less royal because wo have not , as at the banquet given by the king of Scotland , to which the W . M . has alluded , found the gold coins beneath our napkins . We have , I say , enjoyed one of the most hospitable receptions . ( Cheers ) I see at the Board many of the Grand Officers of England , and I am not saying more than the truth , when

I say I see them filling places to which every Mason in the Craft may legitimately aspire , just as there is in this Lodge no office to which tho Brethren , by diligence in the Craft , and by those accomplishments of which they may feel justly proud , may not in proper time aspire . ( Hear , hear . ) I thought when my noble Brother the W . M . gave the toast of the' Grand Officers , ' he would have spared all allusion to any office I may hold elsewhere ; but he has shown himself not only a great master in the Craftbut also a craftMason ( Cheers and

, y . laughter . ) He said that . he hoped I would not be too severe in my drill , but promised for himself that he should be always at attention . I can only say that no drill can be effective in which the troops do not sometimes stand at ease . ( Laughter . ) He shall find mine a very mild rule indeed . Except when the dignity of the Craft requires the contrary , my word of command shall be 'March at ease . ' ( Cheers . ) I may now close these observations , and once more thank you for the honour yon have done us ; but as my noble friend

has alluded to the Grand Lodge of Scotland , I may be permitted , because by the favour of my noble friend , the Grand Master , i have the honour of holding the deputation of the Grand Lodge of England to that of Scotland , to say that I have always found tho greatest cordiality existing between the sister Grand Lodges . " Bro . Beach , M . P ., said : "M . W . G . M ., G . Officers , and Brethren , it is with much pleasure that I find myself privileged to have the opportunity of proposing to your notice the next toast ; I am sure will receive it with enthusiasm when I tell what it is— ' The

you you Brethren whom the M . W . the G . M . has delegated to represent him as Prov . G . M . ' s of the different Provinces . " ( Hear , hear , ) It must be evident to all that such appointments must bo very difficult ( hear ); and their importance cannot be exaggerated ,, because upon the efficiency of our Prov . G . Ms . depends in a very high degree the welfare of the Craft . ( Hear . ) Those appointments , moreover , are not confined to this our native land , but are extended over the entire surface of the globe . ( Cheers . ) The respect in which those Brethren

are universally held is the best practical proof of their efficiency , and of the care with which these appointments have been made . The skill and ability with which those Brethren have discharged their important duties do credit to the selection which the G . M . has made . ( Hear . ) I need only add that it is with the greatest pleasure that we see so many of them among 113 upon this interesting occasion . ( Hear , hear . ) And I call upon you to rise with becoming enthusiasm and to drink to the ProvGMscoupling with tho toast } ' The

. . ., ; health of Bro . Hall , the Prov . G . M . for Cambridgeshire . '" The toast having been duly honoured , Bro . Hall returned thanks . He said he felt some difficulty in returning thanks for that distinguished body to which he had the honour of belonging , and who had so numerously testified by their presence upon that interesting occasion the respect which they entertained for the noble lord the W . M . of that Lodge . ( Cheers . ) He felt bound to refer to the splendid hospitality of that eveningand to the cordial reception which they

, had given them , and he could only refer to it in the most complimentary manner . ( Hear , hear . ) He could hardly regard that as an ordinary Lodge Meeting ( hear ); he rather looked upon it as an important Masonic demonstration . ( Hear . ) They had around them Brethren of every rank in society . ( Hear . ) Ministers of the Cro , vn , noblemen and gentlemen of education and talent , men of fortune , and others who , not participating in those advantages , —all met there with one Masonic feeling , and threw aside all distinctions of rank except

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