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  • The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine
  • Aug. 29, 1868
  • Page 4
  • SKETCHES OF NOTABLE MASONIC WORKS.
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, Aug. 29, 1868: Page 4

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Sketches Of Notable Masonic Works.

SKETCHES OF NOTABLE MASONIC WORKS .

By Bro . WILLIAM JAMES HUGHAN , W . M . 131 , Truro , & c . ( Vide No . 1 , page 141 , No . 451 , 8 f No . 2 , page 121 , No . 47 G . ) No . 3 .

FREEMASONS' POCKET COMPANIONS . Tho first Freemasons' Pocket Companion was published in 1736 by John Torbuck in " Clarecourt , near Drury-lane , London . " It is numbered 129 , by Dr . Kloss . The second edition we have

iu our Masonic library , dated A . D . 1738 , small < Svo ., xi . —119 pages , with a neat frontispiece . It is not , however , much different to the first , although it is stated to contain " large additions . " Bro . WSmith , the author , dedicates the work " To the

brethren aud fellows of the most antient and honourable society of free and accepted Masons . " The preface is well composed , and contains much useful advice . Bro . Smith also " exhorts the

brotherhood that , avoiding * all innovations , they adhere strictly to the antient practices of the Order , when all the social virtues shone conspicuously amongst us , and the world admired us rather for our veracity , brotherly love , and relief of one another ,

than for those invaluable secrets which we have ever kept , or those fabricks which we have erected for the convenience of mankind and ornament of

the world . The following suggestions are likewise so a'oocl O OO •—/ that we offer no apology for presenting them to our readers , with our warm approval , and hope that they may be found worthy of the attention of

Masons now as well as then . The author observes " Let it never be said , that as our numbers increase , the sciences decrease , but let our knowledge shine as formerly for our own honour and the edification of others . No man ought to attain

to any dignity in Masonry who has not at least a competent knowledge in geometery and architecture ; and if the sciences were more followed in tho lodges what is unhappily substituted in their places would not prevail as it does . Then let us

all go haiid-in-hand in promoting the great and laudable ends of our institution , and we cannot fail of gaining the approbation of the whole world as well as of one another . " The " Companion " contains several odes , prologues , epilogues , and Freemasons' songs , but none of importance . The history of Masons and Masonry and the Constitu-

Sketches Of Notable Masonic Works.

tions of A . D . 1723 are inserted , and are of course mainly a copy from the authorized works . " An exact list of regular lodges " from A . D . 1717 to 1738 , with a defence of Masonry , occasioned by a pamphlet called Masonry Dissected , are also

appended , but a notice of their nature and merits would occupy too much space for mention just now The list comprises some 160 lodges , and the "defence " is well worthy of the name . We may state that both of the editions of this " Companion "

are very scarce . There was an earlier [ edition of a little work partaking of the style of a " Companion , " entitled the Freemasons' Vade-Mecum , A . D . 1735 , but we cannot refer to its contents in these pages . The

following sketch will , however , embrace all the " Companions" so far as we know , excluding , however , any works of a similar character ( like " Multa Paucis " ) but of other titles . The next of these useful little publications was

issued A . D . 1754 , by J . Scott , London , and is entitled "The Pocket Companion and History of Freemasons , containing their origin , progress , and present state , an abstract of their laws , constitutions , customs , charges , orders , and regulations , for the instruction and conduct of the brethren .

A confutation of Dr . Plot ' s false insinuations ; an apology occasioned by the persecution in the Canton of Berne and the Pope's dominions ; and a select number of songs and other particulars , for the use of the society , " ( viii . 328 , small 8 vo . )

Per bonam famam et infamam . ( No . 141 , Dr . Kloss Bibliog . ) The second edition was published A . D . 1759 ( viii . 380 ) , and the third A . D . 1764 ( 382 ) . It is one of the most interesting Companions ever published , ancl full of interesting

information relative to the history of the Craft . The work is dedicated "to the Right Hon . and R . W . John Proby , Baron of Carysfort , in the county of Wicklow , in the kingdom of Ireland , Grand Master . " It seems to be mainly a resume of the

Book of Constitutions , A . D . 1738 , as regards the first portion , but the remainder is in many respects unique . The sketch of the progress of the Grand Loclge concludes with the following , after alluding to the " true architecture everywhere abounding , "

that " whilst any of these goodly structures continue to resist the ruins of time , the fame and glory of the most ancient fraternity in the world will be honoured and esteemed by all that love true knowledge ; aud joining the operative and moral architecture together with the constant prac-

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1868-08-29, Page 4” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 28 March 2023, www.masonicperiodicals.org/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_29081868/page/4/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
THE KNIGHTS TEMPLARS. Article 1
SKETCHES OF NOTABLE MASONIC WORKS. Article 4
THE BLUE BLANKET. Article 5
THE MASTER MASON DEGREE—ITS FIRST APPEARANCE IN SCOTLAND. Article 7
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 7
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 11
MASONIC CHARITIES. Article 11
BRO. MANNINGHAM'S LETTER AND THE ROYAL ORDER OF SCOTLAND. Article 11
ANTIQUITY OF THE THIRD DEGREE. Article 11
BRO. MANNINGHAM AND THE HIGH DEGREES. Article 12
SECTARIAN MASONRY. Article 12
MASONIC PROGRESS. Article 12
MASONIC SCHOOLS. Article 13
MASONIC MEMS. Article 14
METROPOLITAN. Article 14
PROVINCIAL. Article 14
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Sketches Of Notable Masonic Works.

SKETCHES OF NOTABLE MASONIC WORKS .

By Bro . WILLIAM JAMES HUGHAN , W . M . 131 , Truro , & c . ( Vide No . 1 , page 141 , No . 451 , 8 f No . 2 , page 121 , No . 47 G . ) No . 3 .

FREEMASONS' POCKET COMPANIONS . Tho first Freemasons' Pocket Companion was published in 1736 by John Torbuck in " Clarecourt , near Drury-lane , London . " It is numbered 129 , by Dr . Kloss . The second edition we have

iu our Masonic library , dated A . D . 1738 , small < Svo ., xi . —119 pages , with a neat frontispiece . It is not , however , much different to the first , although it is stated to contain " large additions . " Bro . WSmith , the author , dedicates the work " To the

brethren aud fellows of the most antient and honourable society of free and accepted Masons . " The preface is well composed , and contains much useful advice . Bro . Smith also " exhorts the

brotherhood that , avoiding * all innovations , they adhere strictly to the antient practices of the Order , when all the social virtues shone conspicuously amongst us , and the world admired us rather for our veracity , brotherly love , and relief of one another ,

than for those invaluable secrets which we have ever kept , or those fabricks which we have erected for the convenience of mankind and ornament of

the world . The following suggestions are likewise so a'oocl O OO •—/ that we offer no apology for presenting them to our readers , with our warm approval , and hope that they may be found worthy of the attention of

Masons now as well as then . The author observes " Let it never be said , that as our numbers increase , the sciences decrease , but let our knowledge shine as formerly for our own honour and the edification of others . No man ought to attain

to any dignity in Masonry who has not at least a competent knowledge in geometery and architecture ; and if the sciences were more followed in tho lodges what is unhappily substituted in their places would not prevail as it does . Then let us

all go haiid-in-hand in promoting the great and laudable ends of our institution , and we cannot fail of gaining the approbation of the whole world as well as of one another . " The " Companion " contains several odes , prologues , epilogues , and Freemasons' songs , but none of importance . The history of Masons and Masonry and the Constitu-

Sketches Of Notable Masonic Works.

tions of A . D . 1723 are inserted , and are of course mainly a copy from the authorized works . " An exact list of regular lodges " from A . D . 1717 to 1738 , with a defence of Masonry , occasioned by a pamphlet called Masonry Dissected , are also

appended , but a notice of their nature and merits would occupy too much space for mention just now The list comprises some 160 lodges , and the "defence " is well worthy of the name . We may state that both of the editions of this " Companion "

are very scarce . There was an earlier [ edition of a little work partaking of the style of a " Companion , " entitled the Freemasons' Vade-Mecum , A . D . 1735 , but we cannot refer to its contents in these pages . The

following sketch will , however , embrace all the " Companions" so far as we know , excluding , however , any works of a similar character ( like " Multa Paucis " ) but of other titles . The next of these useful little publications was

issued A . D . 1754 , by J . Scott , London , and is entitled "The Pocket Companion and History of Freemasons , containing their origin , progress , and present state , an abstract of their laws , constitutions , customs , charges , orders , and regulations , for the instruction and conduct of the brethren .

A confutation of Dr . Plot ' s false insinuations ; an apology occasioned by the persecution in the Canton of Berne and the Pope's dominions ; and a select number of songs and other particulars , for the use of the society , " ( viii . 328 , small 8 vo . )

Per bonam famam et infamam . ( No . 141 , Dr . Kloss Bibliog . ) The second edition was published A . D . 1759 ( viii . 380 ) , and the third A . D . 1764 ( 382 ) . It is one of the most interesting Companions ever published , ancl full of interesting

information relative to the history of the Craft . The work is dedicated "to the Right Hon . and R . W . John Proby , Baron of Carysfort , in the county of Wicklow , in the kingdom of Ireland , Grand Master . " It seems to be mainly a resume of the

Book of Constitutions , A . D . 1738 , as regards the first portion , but the remainder is in many respects unique . The sketch of the progress of the Grand Loclge concludes with the following , after alluding to the " true architecture everywhere abounding , "

that " whilst any of these goodly structures continue to resist the ruins of time , the fame and glory of the most ancient fraternity in the world will be honoured and esteemed by all that love true knowledge ; aud joining the operative and moral architecture together with the constant prac-

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