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Masonic Hall |
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Looking to the East, in through the Western Gate, from Enniskillen Town, at the Junction of A4 Dublin Road, and Tempo Road. |
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Masonic Hall |
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View of Hall form the South, caretakers living quarters to right of hall. |
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Banqueting Hall |
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Prepared for Lodge No. 586 Festive Board. |
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Masonic Hall |
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View looking South. |
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Lodge Room |
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Looking towards the Dias in the East |
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Lodge Room |
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Looking towards the Doors. |
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Lodge Room |
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Junior Wardens Chair. |
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Town Hall |
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High Street Enniskillen, Town hall in centre of picture, where Masonic meetings were held. |
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R.W. Br. Sir Charles Falls, Deputy Provincial Grand Master,
reports very favourably indeed upon the state of the Order in Fermanagh
generally. He is at present chairman of a representative committee to whom has
been entrusted the task of erecting in Enniskillen what promises to be one of
the finest and best equipped Masonic halls in the North of Ireland.
Belfast Telegraph 11 January, 1930.
NP Vol. E. p. H5

The Palace
1902
When I was a King and a Mason -- a Master proven and skilled --
I cleared me ground for a Palace such as a King should build.
I decreed and dug down to my levels. Presently, under the silt,
I came on the wreck of a Palace such as a King had built.
There was no worth in the fashion -- there was no wit in the plan --
Hither and thither, aimless, the ruined footings ran --
Masonry, brute, mishandled, but carven on every stone:
"After me cometh a Builder. Tell him, I too have known."
Swift to my use in my trenches, where my well-planned ground-works grew,
I tumbled his quoins and his ashlars, and cut and reset them anew.
Lime I milled of his marbles; burned it, slacked it, and spread;
Taking and leaving at pleasure the gifts of the humble dead.
Yet I despised not nor gloried; yet, as we wrenched them apart,
I read in the razed foundations the heart of that builder's heart.
As he had risen and pleaded, so did I understand
The form of the dream he had followed in the face of the thing he had planned.
* * * * *
When I was a King and a Mason -- in the open noon of my pride,
They sent me a Word from the Darkness. They whispered and called me aside.
They said -- "The end is forbidden." They said -- "Thy use is fulfilled.
"Thy Palace shall stand as that other's -- the spoil of a King who shall build."
I called my men from my trenches, my quarries, my wharves, and my sheers.
All I had wrought I abandoned to the faith of the faithless years.
Only I cut on the timber -- only I carved on the stone:
"AfterT me cometh a BuilderT. Tell him, I too have known!"
Rudyard Kipling.
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