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  • The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine
  • April 3, 1869
  • Page 11
  • P.M.'S AND THE WORKING BRETHREN OF LODGES.
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, April 3, 1869: Page 11

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    Article P.M.'S AND THE WORKING BRETHREN OF LODGES. ← Page 2 of 2
    Article MASONIC ARCHÆOLOGY . — BRITISH MUSEUM. Page 1 of 1
    Article MASONIC ARCHÆOLOGY . — BRITISH MUSEUM. Page 1 of 1
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P.M.'S And The Working Brethren Of Lodges.

ought m common propriety to explain to those present the authority under which he assumes the chair pro . tern ., and that , having done so , he is fully competent to conduct all the proceedings , unless objection be offered and a claim to occupation of the chair be made by a P . M . present who may have a just right to precedence . I conceive that the law No . 6 under

, the head "Masters and Wardens , " is intended only to define the proper order of precedence , and to prevent unseemly dispute when the W . M . is absent , and has neglected to provide a competent substitute . The question is simply , —Do the words " Senior Past Master of the lodge " mean " the senior P . M . -who is a

member of the lodge ? ' ' or do they mean " the senior Past Master who has passed the chair of the particular lodge ? " Either version may be taken , but the former commends itself b y the ease and brevity with which the hiatus is filled up ; it is , I conceive , the most rational one , and , therefore , the one adopted in

practice . In my experience such has been the regular custom in every lodge with which I have been connected , and never do I remember any interference with , the wish of the W . M . as to his representative under the circumstances named . I admit at once that , as the law at present stands , a P . M . in the lodge should not make a claim to supersede a P . M . of the lodge who demands the chair as a right iu the

absence of the W . M ., but if the W . M . requests any P . M . in the lodge to discharge his duties by acting as his locum tenens , and no objection be offered by the brethren present , I maintain that the P . M , so acting , does not infringe any Masonic law . Since writing the preceding , I have heard from the Grand Registrar of England ; andas he is the

, authorized interpreter of Masonic law , I may , perhaps , be permitted to quote him . He says : — "In my opinion the strict ri ght of presiding in a particular lodge is limited to the W . M . and the P . M . ' s who have served in the office of W . M . iu that lodge . It is not an uncommon practice for the W . M . of a lod

ge to request any eminent brother to perforin the cere monies in his unavoidable absence . In such a case , I see no harm in a brother who has not served the office of W . M . in that lodge presiding in the lodae . If any of the P . M . ' s of such lodge object to his presiding , I think he would be wise to abstain from doing so . "

This , it appears to | me , is very different from the dictum of the P . G . M . for Devon , which at present places me in a disadvantageous position in regard to the ^ Craft in general , and the P . M . ' s of lodges with which I may become in any way connected . I hope that the subject will be well ventilatedand

, that a correct , or at least a definite , decision may be the result , so that the same principle may prevail throughout the Craft . Tours fraternally , H . H .

Masonic Archæology . — British Museum.

MASONIC ARCH ? OLOGY . — BRITISH MUSEUM .

TO TUB EDIIOE OE IKE EB . EEMASONS MAGAZINE AND MASONIC MIttROK . Dear Sir and Brother , —The discovery by Bro . Melville , that the Assyrian marble in the British Museum is not merely of topographical application , but a veritable astrolabe of universal interest , so

Masonic Archæology . — British Museum.

changes the character of that ancient relique , so en " hances its value in a national sense , as to suggest that Bro . Melville ' s paper , descriptive of its astronomical signification , should be appended thereto , just as other reliques , comparatively of no value , have exp lanatory notes annexed to them for general

instruction . The practical nature of the suggestion encourages the hope that the executive department of the Museum will take the steps-requisite to recognise the discovery in connexion with the Assyrian marble . The importation of Cleopatra ' s needle into England

at an expense of £ 1 , 500 has just been mooted m Parliament , but such monuments of antiquity like the Assyrian marble lose their significance when unaccompanied by some authentic interpretation of their historic or scientific value . The cabinet of foreign coins not long since

purchased by the nation at an outlay of many thousand pounds , because illusitrative of ancient history , would m like manner fail in its object without the explanatory letter-press of one of the initiated—a virtuoso . The Assyrian marble referred to might have

remained in the category of unconsidered reliques for generations to come , had not Bro . Melville , initiated in the mysteries of symbolic writing , pronounced it to be an astrolabe of universal interest . Tours fraternally , W . N . CRAWEORD .

THE AXCIENT BB . ITOXS . ~ -Those numerous writers who represent the brave Ancient Britons as being totally without roads of any kind , are evidently in error . The cannibals who , according to recent researches in ancient sepulchres by industrious antiquarians like the . Rev . William Greenwell , of Durham , appear , at some remote period , to have inhabited our country , previous to what

has been hitherto regarded as the Aborigines , and who had , in the course of nature , been forced to give place to a still superior race , may possibly have been in that deplorable condition . Bub a people who understood so well how to fortify their fords , that the strong stakes they had driven into the bed of the Thames remained for many centuries ; and whose enduring earthworks still

show how every mountain top in Britain had been chosen as their " coigne of vantage ; " whose courage in war struck the veteran Roman legions with surprise , and whose skill in riding their small hardy horses and whose dexterity in driving their scythe-armed chariots would be now viewed with admiration in any circus in Europe ; whose careful casting of many metal articles

, of both use and ornament , as well as the construction of their vehicles , show considerable mechanical ability aud artistic skill ; whose knowledge of agriculture extended to the cultivation and garnering of corn , and to the use of marl as a manure ; and whose Bardo-Drnidical system of religion , if we may form any notion of it by the Historical Triads of the Cymry ( the numbers three and

seven being apparently , from remotest ages , dear to superstition ) , was a higher and a holier thing than much that yet passes current among men as sacred ; that such a people , I say , should have possessed no rude roads even , to enable them to pass with ease through their interminable forests , is no article of my historical creed , aud I can only express my surprise that it should form any portion of the belief of so many other authors . — GEORGE MARKHASI TWEDDELL .

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1869-04-03, Page 11” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 29 March 2023, www.masonicperiodicals.org/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_03041869/page/11/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
EARS OF WHEAT FROM A CORNUCOPIA. Article 1
MASONIC CELESTIAL MYSTERIES. Article 3
FREEMASONRY AND CHRISTIANITY. Article 6
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 7
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 9
"THE IRISH CHURCH FROM A MASONIC POINT OF VIEW." Article 10
P.M.'S AND THE WORKING BRETHREN OF LODGES. Article 10
MASONIC ARCHÆOLOGY . — BRITISH MUSEUM. Article 11
Untitled Article 12
MASONIC MEMS. Article 12
MASONIC ARCHÆOLOG ICAL INSTITUTE. Article 13
METROPOLITAN. Article 15
PROVINCIAL. Article 16
SCOTLAND. Article 18
ROYAL ARCH. Article 18
KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. Article 19
DEDICATION OF THE METHAM MASONIC HALL AT PLYMOUTH. Article 19
MASONIC LIFEBOAT FUND. Article 19
PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 19
MEETINGS OF THE LEARNED SOCIETIES. Article 19
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 20
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

P.M.'S And The Working Brethren Of Lodges.

ought m common propriety to explain to those present the authority under which he assumes the chair pro . tern ., and that , having done so , he is fully competent to conduct all the proceedings , unless objection be offered and a claim to occupation of the chair be made by a P . M . present who may have a just right to precedence . I conceive that the law No . 6 under

, the head "Masters and Wardens , " is intended only to define the proper order of precedence , and to prevent unseemly dispute when the W . M . is absent , and has neglected to provide a competent substitute . The question is simply , —Do the words " Senior Past Master of the lodge " mean " the senior P . M . -who is a

member of the lodge ? ' ' or do they mean " the senior Past Master who has passed the chair of the particular lodge ? " Either version may be taken , but the former commends itself b y the ease and brevity with which the hiatus is filled up ; it is , I conceive , the most rational one , and , therefore , the one adopted in

practice . In my experience such has been the regular custom in every lodge with which I have been connected , and never do I remember any interference with , the wish of the W . M . as to his representative under the circumstances named . I admit at once that , as the law at present stands , a P . M . in the lodge should not make a claim to supersede a P . M . of the lodge who demands the chair as a right iu the

absence of the W . M ., but if the W . M . requests any P . M . in the lodge to discharge his duties by acting as his locum tenens , and no objection be offered by the brethren present , I maintain that the P . M , so acting , does not infringe any Masonic law . Since writing the preceding , I have heard from the Grand Registrar of England ; andas he is the

, authorized interpreter of Masonic law , I may , perhaps , be permitted to quote him . He says : — "In my opinion the strict ri ght of presiding in a particular lodge is limited to the W . M . and the P . M . ' s who have served in the office of W . M . iu that lodge . It is not an uncommon practice for the W . M . of a lod

ge to request any eminent brother to perforin the cere monies in his unavoidable absence . In such a case , I see no harm in a brother who has not served the office of W . M . in that lodge presiding in the lodae . If any of the P . M . ' s of such lodge object to his presiding , I think he would be wise to abstain from doing so . "

This , it appears to | me , is very different from the dictum of the P . G . M . for Devon , which at present places me in a disadvantageous position in regard to the ^ Craft in general , and the P . M . ' s of lodges with which I may become in any way connected . I hope that the subject will be well ventilatedand

, that a correct , or at least a definite , decision may be the result , so that the same principle may prevail throughout the Craft . Tours fraternally , H . H .

Masonic Archæology . — British Museum.

MASONIC ARCH ? OLOGY . — BRITISH MUSEUM .

TO TUB EDIIOE OE IKE EB . EEMASONS MAGAZINE AND MASONIC MIttROK . Dear Sir and Brother , —The discovery by Bro . Melville , that the Assyrian marble in the British Museum is not merely of topographical application , but a veritable astrolabe of universal interest , so

Masonic Archæology . — British Museum.

changes the character of that ancient relique , so en " hances its value in a national sense , as to suggest that Bro . Melville ' s paper , descriptive of its astronomical signification , should be appended thereto , just as other reliques , comparatively of no value , have exp lanatory notes annexed to them for general

instruction . The practical nature of the suggestion encourages the hope that the executive department of the Museum will take the steps-requisite to recognise the discovery in connexion with the Assyrian marble . The importation of Cleopatra ' s needle into England

at an expense of £ 1 , 500 has just been mooted m Parliament , but such monuments of antiquity like the Assyrian marble lose their significance when unaccompanied by some authentic interpretation of their historic or scientific value . The cabinet of foreign coins not long since

purchased by the nation at an outlay of many thousand pounds , because illusitrative of ancient history , would m like manner fail in its object without the explanatory letter-press of one of the initiated—a virtuoso . The Assyrian marble referred to might have

remained in the category of unconsidered reliques for generations to come , had not Bro . Melville , initiated in the mysteries of symbolic writing , pronounced it to be an astrolabe of universal interest . Tours fraternally , W . N . CRAWEORD .

THE AXCIENT BB . ITOXS . ~ -Those numerous writers who represent the brave Ancient Britons as being totally without roads of any kind , are evidently in error . The cannibals who , according to recent researches in ancient sepulchres by industrious antiquarians like the . Rev . William Greenwell , of Durham , appear , at some remote period , to have inhabited our country , previous to what

has been hitherto regarded as the Aborigines , and who had , in the course of nature , been forced to give place to a still superior race , may possibly have been in that deplorable condition . Bub a people who understood so well how to fortify their fords , that the strong stakes they had driven into the bed of the Thames remained for many centuries ; and whose enduring earthworks still

show how every mountain top in Britain had been chosen as their " coigne of vantage ; " whose courage in war struck the veteran Roman legions with surprise , and whose skill in riding their small hardy horses and whose dexterity in driving their scythe-armed chariots would be now viewed with admiration in any circus in Europe ; whose careful casting of many metal articles

, of both use and ornament , as well as the construction of their vehicles , show considerable mechanical ability aud artistic skill ; whose knowledge of agriculture extended to the cultivation and garnering of corn , and to the use of marl as a manure ; and whose Bardo-Drnidical system of religion , if we may form any notion of it by the Historical Triads of the Cymry ( the numbers three and

seven being apparently , from remotest ages , dear to superstition ) , was a higher and a holier thing than much that yet passes current among men as sacred ; that such a people , I say , should have possessed no rude roads even , to enable them to pass with ease through their interminable forests , is no article of my historical creed , aud I can only express my surprise that it should form any portion of the belief of so many other authors . — GEORGE MARKHASI TWEDDELL .

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