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  • The Freemason
  • Dec. 20, 1884
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  • A VISIT TO THE BRITISH OPHTHALMIC HOSPITAL, JERUSALEM.
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The " Red Apron " Lodges.

Thus the first recorded appointment of Grand Stewards is in 1723 , when their number is six , and the Premier Book of Constitutions gives their appointment to the Grand Master , but without specifying their number . At the Feast of 24 th June , 1724 , 12 Stewards acted , of whom six were the Stewards of thc previous year . The following year 110 Stewards were

appointed , and Brother John James He'idcgger was ordered " to prepare thc Feast in thc best Manner ; " and the ncxt year there were " no Stewards , but Brother Edward Lambert undertook to prepare the Feast . " The same Brother again prepared the Feast in 1727 ; and on 26 th November , 172 S , " Brother Desaguliers moved to revive thc Office of Stewards to assist the Grand Wardens in preparing the Feast , and that their number be 12 , which was readily agreed to . " ( Anderson , 1738 , parrc 123 . )

From this time there were 12 Stewards regularly appointed for each Annual Feast , until on 29 th May , 1 S 15 . 18 were appointed , which has continued to be the number ever since ; except in 1 S 46 , when the G . Master refused to accept the nomination made by Lodge No . 30 , and only 17 Stewards were appointed , and in the next year only 16 were appointed ,

for what reason I do not know . ( G . Lodge Reports . ) ( Bro . Hughan says in the " Masonic Register , " page 40 : " From 1735 to 1813 12 Stewards wcre annually selected ; " but he is surely in error as to the first date , for Anderson gives the names of 12 Stewards regularly on from 1728 , except for 1730 , when there was no Feast , owing to the absence of the Grand Master , the Dukeof Norfolk , at Venice . )

'Ihe distinctive clothing now worn by Grand Stewards was first allowed to them on 17 th March , 1730-1 , when "the Stewards for the year were allowed to have Jewels of Silver ( tho' not guilded ) pendent to Red Ribbons about their Necks , to bear White Rods , and to line their White Leather Aprons with Red Silk . " Hence the lodges which now furnish Grand

Stewards are known as " Red Apron Lodges . The next privilege they obtained was that each Steward might name his successor in office for the following year . This was granted to them on 2 nd March , 1731-2—( Anderson , 173 S , page 167)—in order , as Preston says , to encourage gentlemen to accept the office of Steward . ( Illustrations , Ed . 1801 , page 231 . )

Next it was agreed on 31 st March , 1735 , that ail Grand Officers , the Grand Master excepted , should be elected from those who had served as Stewards—( Gould ' s "Four Old . Lodges , " page 31)—and this great privilege was confirmed to them on 3 rd February , 1779 , when the Master and other brethren of the Stewards' Lodge complained that of late years those who served as Stewards had declined to join the Stewards' Lodge , and to remedy this the following resolution was agreed to : " Whereas it appears ,

from the book of Constitutions , to have been the invariable usage of the society to appoint the officers of the grand lodge from such brethren only who have served the office of grand steward , Resolved , that in future no brother be appointed a grand officer until he shall have served the office of steward at a grand feast ; nor unless he be an actual subscribing member of the stewards' lodge at the time of his appointment . " ( Constitutions , 17 S 4 , page 328 . )

The year 1735 was apparently that in which the Stewards were most influential , for besides the privilege of providing the Grand Officers , they also obtained in that year the formation of the Stewards' Lodge , which was granted on 24 th June , 1735 , in compliance with an address to Grand Lodge from former Stewards . " In consideration of their past Service and future Usefulness" Grand Lodge ordained : —

1 . "That they should be constituted a Lodge of Masters , to be called the Stewards Lodge , to be register'd as such in the Grand Lodge Books and printed List , with the Times and Place of their Meetings . 2 . " That the Stewards Lodge shall have the privilege of sending a

Deputation of 12 to every Grand Lodge , viz ., the Master , Two Wardens and Nine more , and Each of the 12 shall vote there , and Each of ' em that attends shall pay Half a Crown , towards the Expence of the Grand Lodge . 3 . " That no Brother who has not been a Steward shall wear the same Sort of Aprons and Ribbons .

4 . "That each of the 12 Deputies from the Stewards Lodge shall , in the Grand Lodge , wear a peculiar jewel suspended in the Red Ribbon ; the Pattern ol which was then approved . 5 . " That the 12 Stewards of the current year shall always attend the Grand Lodge in their proper Clothing and Jewels , paying al the Rate of four Lodges towards the Expence of the Communication : But they are not to vote , nor even to speak , except when desired , or else of what relates to the ensuing Feast only . " ( Anderson , 1738 , p . 16 S . )

Accordingly at the Grand Lodgeof nth December , 1 735 , "Sir Robert Lawley , Master of the Stewards Lodge , with his Wardens and nine more , with their new Badges , appeared full 12 the first time . " However , there was much dissatisfaction felt at these extraordinary privileges being granted to the Stewards ; it is stated in the Freemasons ' Calendar for 1783 ( p . 22 ) that the 12 Stewards who appeared in December ,

1735 , were not allowed to vote , though it is not clear to me whether this refers to the Deputation from the new Stewards Lodge or to the 12 Stewards of the current year , who are clearly distinct bodies ; and a vigorous attempt was made to cancel the new privileges by a refusal to confirm the minutes of the June meeting . But , " In the course of the collecting the votes on

this occasion , there appeared so much confusion that it was not possible for the Grand Ofiicers to determine with any certainty what the numbers on cither side of the question were . They were therefore obliged to dismiss thc debate and close the lodge . " ( Extracted from Grand Lodge Minutes by Bro . Gould . " Four Old Lodges , " p . 31 . )

But the minutes apparently were confirmed at some time , for the neiv Stewards' Lodge appears in the Grand Lodge List for 1736 as No . 117 ( Gould , p . 5 ) , but when the numbers of the Lodges were altered by order of the Grand Lodge on 1 Sth April , 1792 , it was placed at the head of the list without a number ( Freemason ' s Calendar for for 1793 ) , the position it now occupies ; though Preston ( Illustrations , Ed . 1 S 01 , p . 237 ) says this privilege

was " a measure very incompatible with the original Constitutions , and which can never be sanctioned by thc rules of the Society . Several Lodges have entered protests against it in their private books ; which at some future time may have an effect , and probably induce a re-investigation of the subject . " It is worth while lo pause hero to recapitulate the privileges obtained by

the Grand Stewards during the first 12 years of their existence ; they were first appointed in 172 . 3 by the Grand Master , their number was fixed at 12 in 1728 , ihey obtained distinctive clothing in 1730-1 , in the following year they were allowed to name their successors , in 1735 they got a monopoly of all the offices in Grand Lodge , and in the same year the Stewards' Lodge was

The " Red Apron " Lodges.

formed with the privilege of sending 12 members with individual votes to Grand Lodge . Their next privilege was gained when " On February , 1770 , the grand lodge resolved , that the stewards' lodge be allowed the privilege of sending a number of brethren , equal to any olher four lodges , to every

future committee of charity ; and that as the master alone of each private lodge only has a right to attend , in order to make a proper distinction between the stewards' lodge and the other lodges , the master and three other members of that lodge be permitted to attend at every succeeding , committee on behalf of the said lodge . " ( Constitutions , 17 S 4 , page 383 . )

At the Union in 1813 its monopoly of supplying Grand Officers was apparently tacitly withdrawn from the Stewards' Lodge , though its right to send to Grand Lodge twelve Grand Stewards from its members existing at the Union was preserved to it , but with the proviso " it being . understood and agreed that , from and alter the Union , an annual appointment shall be made of the Stewards if necessary . " ( Articles of Union , Art . vii . ) Accordingly on 29 th May , 1 S 15 , eighteen Grand Stewards were

appointed , being nominated by the Grand Master ( Grand Lodge Reports ) and the appointment of their successors , in 1816 , was also made by the Grand Master ( Constitutions , 1 S 27 , page 42 ); this being the last instance of the appointment of Stewards by him , for on 24 th April , 1816 , the Stewards for the ensuing year were presented by their predecessors , being one from each of the eighteen lodges from which the Grand Master had made his last appointments ; and the Grand Stewards have been annually selected in this way ever since .

The eighteen lodges from which the Stewards were appointed in 1816 were : No . in 1 S 16 . Present No . 1 . The Grand Masters' Lodge ... ... 1 2 . Antiquity ... ... ... ... 2 4 . Royal Somerset House and Inverness ... 4 6 . Friendship ... ... ... ... 6 5 . British ... ... ... ... ... S

14 . Tuscan ... ... ... ... ... 14 22 . Emulation ... ... ... ... 21 25 . Globe ... ... ... ... ... 23 29 . Castle Lodge of Harmony ... ... 26 34 . Old King ' s Arms ... ... ... 28 35 . St . Alban's ... ... ... ... 29 40 . Corner Stone ... ... ... ... 5

( United in 1 843 with No . 5 . ) 75 . Felicity ... ... ... ... ... 58 82 . Peace and Harmony ... ... ... 60 142 . Regularity ... ... ... ... 91 156 . Shakspeare ... ... ... ... 99 435 . Pilgrim ... ... ... ... ... 23 S

493 . Princeof Wales ... ... ... ... 259 The above are now the " Red Apron Lodges , " except that in 1 S 34 the " Pilgrim " Lodge lost its privilege , and was replaced by the "Jerusalem " Lodge , now No . 197 , no reason being given in Grand Lodge Reports for the change , but it is stated in thc Freemasons' Quarterly Review for 1834 ( p . 51 ) , that the " Pilgrim" Lodge declined to send a Steward for that

year ; and on 28 th April , 1 S 52 , the Grand Master announced that the "Old King ' s Arms" Lodge had lost its privilege by not submitting a name in lime , and that he had selected the " Old Union " Lodge , now No . 46 , in its place . An attempt to reverse this decision was made at the following meeting , but failed . ( Grand Lodge Reports . ) 1 have now traced , clearly , I hope , the privileges granted at various times to the Grand Stewards , and have shown that the present " Red

Apron " Lodges were , with two exceptions , selected by the Grand Master in 1816 , and will conclude with saying that on 19 th April , 184 S , it was proposed that all London lodges should be allowed to furnish Grand Stewards —eighteen lodges to be taken in rotation annually . The motion was lost by a majority of 40 . Great amusement was caused by one speaker , who said that " the present Red Apron Lodges were in possession of all the wealth , all the talent , and all the education to be found in Masonry . ( Freemasons' Quarterly Review , 1848 , p . 172 . )

A Visit To The British Ophthalmic Hospital, Jerusalem.

A VISIT TO THE BRITISH OPHTHALMIC HOSPITAL , JERUSALEM .

On the Bethlehem-road , about 10 minutes' walk from the Jaffa Gate of Jerusalem , stands a building which at once attracts attention not only on account of its substantial character , but also from the splendid situation it occupies . Thoroughly Oriental in style , indeed more so than usual , it yet lacks that appearance of having been thrown together—with windows stuck in anywhere—that general look of unevenness which we have hitherto so

frequently observed . Massive and square in its outline , with large windows heavily ironed , regular parapets , and a castellated tower—the "keep "as it were—one might readily imagine it to be a kind of outlying fortification , and it really appears as if it could stand a fair siege . Surrounding it and stretching away towards Bethlehem is a large orchard , full of olive , fig ,

walnut , and other trees , with innumerable vines , planted wherever one can be placed ;—the whole presenting a most refreshing aspect , and evidence of cultivation most unusual in this part of Palestine . Over the gateway floats a large flag , wilh the white Maltese cross on a crimson ground , while over the door , carved in stone , is a shield with a similar device .

This is "The British Hospice of St . John , " as it is generally termed by ihe inhabitants , or more fully , " The British Ophthalmic Hospital established by the English Langue of the Order of St . John of Jerusalem ; " a Society which in its charitable work recognises no difference of nationality or creed , but is thoroughly unsectarian , its members desiring only , as far as their

means permit , to do whatever is possible in mitigation of that universal suffering which , in some form or other , is thc common lot of humanity , and thus to perpetuate the humane and generous purpose of the chivalrous and ancient Order from which they take their name , and which is in them revived .

A ring at the bell brings a turbanned and baggy-lrowsered attendant with a heavy grey moustache to the gate , who , to our enquiry , informs us that the doctor is at home , and invites us to enter . We descend a short flight of steps and lind ourselves in a large courtyard , surrounded on all sides by buildings and overlooked by terraces . On one side of this courtyard extends a series of rooms opening from it , which belong to the outpatients' department . At the further end is a covered archway , from which i open the kitchen and store rooms . On the opposite side , a door leads tq

“The Freemason: 1884-12-20, Page 16” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 10 Aug. 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fvl/issues/fvl_20121884/page/16/.
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CONTENTS. Article 1
Untitled Article 1
CONSECRATION OF THE BYRON LODGE OF ROYAL ARK MARINERS AT NOTTINGHAM. Article 2
CONSTITUTION OF A PROV. GRAND ROYAL ARCH CHAPTER FOR GLOUCESTERSHIRE. Article 2
SOME ANCIENT YORK MASONS AND THEIR EARLY HAUNTS. Article 3
GRADE AND DEGREE. Article 3
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Untitled Article 5
To Correspondents. Article 5
Untitled Article 5
Original Correspondence. Article 5
REVIEWS Article 5
Masonic Notes and Queries. Article 5
REPORTS OF MASONIC MEETINGS. Article 6
INSTRUCTION. Article 8
Royal Arch. Article 8
INSTRUCTION. Article 9
Mark Masonry. Article 9
Knights Templar. Article 9
Red Cross of Constantine. Article 9
Royal Ark Mariners. Article 9
Obituary. Article 10
MASONIC AND GENERAL TIDINGS Article 10
FREEMASONRY IN 1884. Article 11
THE " RED APRON " LODGES. Article 15
A VISIT TO THE BRITISH OPHTHALMIC HOSPITAL, JERUSALEM. Article 16
OCCURRENCES OF THE YEAR. Article 18
BRO. ROB MORRIS'S REMINISCENCES OF SMYRNA. Article 20
Untitled Article 20
Untitled Article 20
AN ALARMING DISEASE AFFLICTING A NUMEROUS CLASS. Article 20
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

The " Red Apron " Lodges.

Thus the first recorded appointment of Grand Stewards is in 1723 , when their number is six , and the Premier Book of Constitutions gives their appointment to the Grand Master , but without specifying their number . At the Feast of 24 th June , 1724 , 12 Stewards acted , of whom six were the Stewards of thc previous year . The following year 110 Stewards were

appointed , and Brother John James He'idcgger was ordered " to prepare thc Feast in thc best Manner ; " and the ncxt year there were " no Stewards , but Brother Edward Lambert undertook to prepare the Feast . " The same Brother again prepared the Feast in 1727 ; and on 26 th November , 172 S , " Brother Desaguliers moved to revive thc Office of Stewards to assist the Grand Wardens in preparing the Feast , and that their number be 12 , which was readily agreed to . " ( Anderson , 1738 , parrc 123 . )

From this time there were 12 Stewards regularly appointed for each Annual Feast , until on 29 th May , 1 S 15 . 18 were appointed , which has continued to be the number ever since ; except in 1 S 46 , when the G . Master refused to accept the nomination made by Lodge No . 30 , and only 17 Stewards were appointed , and in the next year only 16 were appointed ,

for what reason I do not know . ( G . Lodge Reports . ) ( Bro . Hughan says in the " Masonic Register , " page 40 : " From 1735 to 1813 12 Stewards wcre annually selected ; " but he is surely in error as to the first date , for Anderson gives the names of 12 Stewards regularly on from 1728 , except for 1730 , when there was no Feast , owing to the absence of the Grand Master , the Dukeof Norfolk , at Venice . )

'Ihe distinctive clothing now worn by Grand Stewards was first allowed to them on 17 th March , 1730-1 , when "the Stewards for the year were allowed to have Jewels of Silver ( tho' not guilded ) pendent to Red Ribbons about their Necks , to bear White Rods , and to line their White Leather Aprons with Red Silk . " Hence the lodges which now furnish Grand

Stewards are known as " Red Apron Lodges . The next privilege they obtained was that each Steward might name his successor in office for the following year . This was granted to them on 2 nd March , 1731-2—( Anderson , 173 S , page 167)—in order , as Preston says , to encourage gentlemen to accept the office of Steward . ( Illustrations , Ed . 1801 , page 231 . )

Next it was agreed on 31 st March , 1735 , that ail Grand Officers , the Grand Master excepted , should be elected from those who had served as Stewards—( Gould ' s "Four Old . Lodges , " page 31)—and this great privilege was confirmed to them on 3 rd February , 1779 , when the Master and other brethren of the Stewards' Lodge complained that of late years those who served as Stewards had declined to join the Stewards' Lodge , and to remedy this the following resolution was agreed to : " Whereas it appears ,

from the book of Constitutions , to have been the invariable usage of the society to appoint the officers of the grand lodge from such brethren only who have served the office of grand steward , Resolved , that in future no brother be appointed a grand officer until he shall have served the office of steward at a grand feast ; nor unless he be an actual subscribing member of the stewards' lodge at the time of his appointment . " ( Constitutions , 17 S 4 , page 328 . )

The year 1735 was apparently that in which the Stewards were most influential , for besides the privilege of providing the Grand Officers , they also obtained in that year the formation of the Stewards' Lodge , which was granted on 24 th June , 1735 , in compliance with an address to Grand Lodge from former Stewards . " In consideration of their past Service and future Usefulness" Grand Lodge ordained : —

1 . "That they should be constituted a Lodge of Masters , to be called the Stewards Lodge , to be register'd as such in the Grand Lodge Books and printed List , with the Times and Place of their Meetings . 2 . " That the Stewards Lodge shall have the privilege of sending a

Deputation of 12 to every Grand Lodge , viz ., the Master , Two Wardens and Nine more , and Each of the 12 shall vote there , and Each of ' em that attends shall pay Half a Crown , towards the Expence of the Grand Lodge . 3 . " That no Brother who has not been a Steward shall wear the same Sort of Aprons and Ribbons .

4 . "That each of the 12 Deputies from the Stewards Lodge shall , in the Grand Lodge , wear a peculiar jewel suspended in the Red Ribbon ; the Pattern ol which was then approved . 5 . " That the 12 Stewards of the current year shall always attend the Grand Lodge in their proper Clothing and Jewels , paying al the Rate of four Lodges towards the Expence of the Communication : But they are not to vote , nor even to speak , except when desired , or else of what relates to the ensuing Feast only . " ( Anderson , 1738 , p . 16 S . )

Accordingly at the Grand Lodgeof nth December , 1 735 , "Sir Robert Lawley , Master of the Stewards Lodge , with his Wardens and nine more , with their new Badges , appeared full 12 the first time . " However , there was much dissatisfaction felt at these extraordinary privileges being granted to the Stewards ; it is stated in the Freemasons ' Calendar for 1783 ( p . 22 ) that the 12 Stewards who appeared in December ,

1735 , were not allowed to vote , though it is not clear to me whether this refers to the Deputation from the new Stewards Lodge or to the 12 Stewards of the current year , who are clearly distinct bodies ; and a vigorous attempt was made to cancel the new privileges by a refusal to confirm the minutes of the June meeting . But , " In the course of the collecting the votes on

this occasion , there appeared so much confusion that it was not possible for the Grand Ofiicers to determine with any certainty what the numbers on cither side of the question were . They were therefore obliged to dismiss thc debate and close the lodge . " ( Extracted from Grand Lodge Minutes by Bro . Gould . " Four Old Lodges , " p . 31 . )

But the minutes apparently were confirmed at some time , for the neiv Stewards' Lodge appears in the Grand Lodge List for 1736 as No . 117 ( Gould , p . 5 ) , but when the numbers of the Lodges were altered by order of the Grand Lodge on 1 Sth April , 1792 , it was placed at the head of the list without a number ( Freemason ' s Calendar for for 1793 ) , the position it now occupies ; though Preston ( Illustrations , Ed . 1 S 01 , p . 237 ) says this privilege

was " a measure very incompatible with the original Constitutions , and which can never be sanctioned by thc rules of the Society . Several Lodges have entered protests against it in their private books ; which at some future time may have an effect , and probably induce a re-investigation of the subject . " It is worth while lo pause hero to recapitulate the privileges obtained by

the Grand Stewards during the first 12 years of their existence ; they were first appointed in 172 . 3 by the Grand Master , their number was fixed at 12 in 1728 , ihey obtained distinctive clothing in 1730-1 , in the following year they were allowed to name their successors , in 1735 they got a monopoly of all the offices in Grand Lodge , and in the same year the Stewards' Lodge was

The " Red Apron " Lodges.

formed with the privilege of sending 12 members with individual votes to Grand Lodge . Their next privilege was gained when " On February , 1770 , the grand lodge resolved , that the stewards' lodge be allowed the privilege of sending a number of brethren , equal to any olher four lodges , to every

future committee of charity ; and that as the master alone of each private lodge only has a right to attend , in order to make a proper distinction between the stewards' lodge and the other lodges , the master and three other members of that lodge be permitted to attend at every succeeding , committee on behalf of the said lodge . " ( Constitutions , 17 S 4 , page 383 . )

At the Union in 1813 its monopoly of supplying Grand Officers was apparently tacitly withdrawn from the Stewards' Lodge , though its right to send to Grand Lodge twelve Grand Stewards from its members existing at the Union was preserved to it , but with the proviso " it being . understood and agreed that , from and alter the Union , an annual appointment shall be made of the Stewards if necessary . " ( Articles of Union , Art . vii . ) Accordingly on 29 th May , 1 S 15 , eighteen Grand Stewards were

appointed , being nominated by the Grand Master ( Grand Lodge Reports ) and the appointment of their successors , in 1816 , was also made by the Grand Master ( Constitutions , 1 S 27 , page 42 ); this being the last instance of the appointment of Stewards by him , for on 24 th April , 1816 , the Stewards for the ensuing year were presented by their predecessors , being one from each of the eighteen lodges from which the Grand Master had made his last appointments ; and the Grand Stewards have been annually selected in this way ever since .

The eighteen lodges from which the Stewards were appointed in 1816 were : No . in 1 S 16 . Present No . 1 . The Grand Masters' Lodge ... ... 1 2 . Antiquity ... ... ... ... 2 4 . Royal Somerset House and Inverness ... 4 6 . Friendship ... ... ... ... 6 5 . British ... ... ... ... ... S

14 . Tuscan ... ... ... ... ... 14 22 . Emulation ... ... ... ... 21 25 . Globe ... ... ... ... ... 23 29 . Castle Lodge of Harmony ... ... 26 34 . Old King ' s Arms ... ... ... 28 35 . St . Alban's ... ... ... ... 29 40 . Corner Stone ... ... ... ... 5

( United in 1 843 with No . 5 . ) 75 . Felicity ... ... ... ... ... 58 82 . Peace and Harmony ... ... ... 60 142 . Regularity ... ... ... ... 91 156 . Shakspeare ... ... ... ... 99 435 . Pilgrim ... ... ... ... ... 23 S

493 . Princeof Wales ... ... ... ... 259 The above are now the " Red Apron Lodges , " except that in 1 S 34 the " Pilgrim " Lodge lost its privilege , and was replaced by the "Jerusalem " Lodge , now No . 197 , no reason being given in Grand Lodge Reports for the change , but it is stated in thc Freemasons' Quarterly Review for 1834 ( p . 51 ) , that the " Pilgrim" Lodge declined to send a Steward for that

year ; and on 28 th April , 1 S 52 , the Grand Master announced that the "Old King ' s Arms" Lodge had lost its privilege by not submitting a name in lime , and that he had selected the " Old Union " Lodge , now No . 46 , in its place . An attempt to reverse this decision was made at the following meeting , but failed . ( Grand Lodge Reports . ) 1 have now traced , clearly , I hope , the privileges granted at various times to the Grand Stewards , and have shown that the present " Red

Apron " Lodges were , with two exceptions , selected by the Grand Master in 1816 , and will conclude with saying that on 19 th April , 184 S , it was proposed that all London lodges should be allowed to furnish Grand Stewards —eighteen lodges to be taken in rotation annually . The motion was lost by a majority of 40 . Great amusement was caused by one speaker , who said that " the present Red Apron Lodges were in possession of all the wealth , all the talent , and all the education to be found in Masonry . ( Freemasons' Quarterly Review , 1848 , p . 172 . )

A Visit To The British Ophthalmic Hospital, Jerusalem.

A VISIT TO THE BRITISH OPHTHALMIC HOSPITAL , JERUSALEM .

On the Bethlehem-road , about 10 minutes' walk from the Jaffa Gate of Jerusalem , stands a building which at once attracts attention not only on account of its substantial character , but also from the splendid situation it occupies . Thoroughly Oriental in style , indeed more so than usual , it yet lacks that appearance of having been thrown together—with windows stuck in anywhere—that general look of unevenness which we have hitherto so

frequently observed . Massive and square in its outline , with large windows heavily ironed , regular parapets , and a castellated tower—the "keep "as it were—one might readily imagine it to be a kind of outlying fortification , and it really appears as if it could stand a fair siege . Surrounding it and stretching away towards Bethlehem is a large orchard , full of olive , fig ,

walnut , and other trees , with innumerable vines , planted wherever one can be placed ;—the whole presenting a most refreshing aspect , and evidence of cultivation most unusual in this part of Palestine . Over the gateway floats a large flag , wilh the white Maltese cross on a crimson ground , while over the door , carved in stone , is a shield with a similar device .

This is "The British Hospice of St . John , " as it is generally termed by ihe inhabitants , or more fully , " The British Ophthalmic Hospital established by the English Langue of the Order of St . John of Jerusalem ; " a Society which in its charitable work recognises no difference of nationality or creed , but is thoroughly unsectarian , its members desiring only , as far as their

means permit , to do whatever is possible in mitigation of that universal suffering which , in some form or other , is thc common lot of humanity , and thus to perpetuate the humane and generous purpose of the chivalrous and ancient Order from which they take their name , and which is in them revived .

A ring at the bell brings a turbanned and baggy-lrowsered attendant with a heavy grey moustache to the gate , who , to our enquiry , informs us that the doctor is at home , and invites us to enter . We descend a short flight of steps and lind ourselves in a large courtyard , surrounded on all sides by buildings and overlooked by terraces . On one side of this courtyard extends a series of rooms opening from it , which belong to the outpatients' department . At the further end is a covered archway , from which i open the kitchen and store rooms . On the opposite side , a door leads tq

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