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  • May 1, 1794
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The Freemasons' Magazine, May 1, 1794: Page 31

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    Article AN ACCOUNT OF DRUIDISM. ← Page 6 of 8 →
Page 31

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An Account Of Druidism.

( though m the time they do not all agree ) , the snakes meet in companies , and that by joining heads together and hissing , a kind of bubble is formed , which the rest , by continual hissing , blow on till it passes quite through the body , when it immediately hardens , and resembles a glass . ring , which whoever finds shall prosper in all his undertakings . The rings thus generated are called Gleinu-nadroeth , or snake-stones . They

are small glass amulets , commonly about half as wide as our fingerrings , but much thicker , of a green colour usually , though sometimes blue , and waved with red and white . " Carew says , that " the country people in Cornwall have a persuasion that the snakes breathing upon a hazel wand produce a stone ring of blue colour , in which there appears the yellow figure of a snake , and that beasts bit and envenomed , being

given some water to drink wherein this stone has been infused , will perfectly recover of the poison * . " From the animal the Druids passed to the vegetable world ; and there also displayed their powers , whilst by the charms of the misletoe , the selago , and the samolus , they prevented or repelled disease , and * every species of misfortune . They made all nature , indeed , subservient to their magical art , and rendered even the rivers and the rocks prophetic . From the undulation or bubbling of water stirred by an oak branch , or magic wand , they foretold events that were to come .

This superstition of the Druids is even now retained in the western counties . To this day the Cornish have been accustomed to consult their famous well at Madern , or rather the spirit of the well , respecting their future destiny . " Hither , " says Borlase , " come the uneasy , impatient , and superstitious , and by dropping pins f or pebbles into the water , and by shaking the . ground round the spring , so . as to raise bubbles from the bottomat a certain time of the yearmoonand day

, , , , endeavour to remove their uneasiness : yet the supposed responses serve equally to encrease the gloom of the melancholy , the suspicions of the jealous , and the passion of the enamoured . The Castalian fountain , and many others among the Grecians , were supposed to be of a prophetic nature . By dipping a fair mirror into a well , the Patraians of Greece received , as they supposed , some notice of ensuing sickness

or health from the various figures pourtrayed upon the surface . The people of Laconia cast into a pool sacred to Juno cakes of bread-corn : if the cakes sunk , good was portended ; if they swam something dreadful was to ensue . Sometimes the superstitious threw three stones into the water , and formed their-conclusions from the several turns they made in sinking . " The Druids were likewise able to communicate , by consecration , the most portentous virtues to rocks and stones , which could determine the succession of princes or the fate of empires . To the Rocking , or Logan Stone | , in particular , they had recourse to confirm

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1794-05-01, Page 31” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 24 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01051794/page/31/.
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
Untitled Article 2
LONDON: Article 2
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 3
THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE, OR GENERAL AND COMPLETE LIBRARY. Article 4
THOUGHTS ON MODERN WIT. Article 8
MARY QUEEN OF SCOTS TO QUEEN ELIZABETH. Article 9
QUEEN ELIZABETH TO SIR NICHOLAS THROGMORTON. Article 9
A SPEECH Article 10
JOHN COUSTOS, FOR FREEMASONRY, Article 12
KNIGHTS TEMPLARS IN ENGLAND, Article 16
Untitled Article 17
ACCOUNT OF A TOUR TO KILLARNEY, &c. IN A LETTER TO J. AND E, FRY. Article 18
THE LIFE OF MRS. ANNE AYSCOUGH, OR ASKEW. Article 22
AN ACCOUNT OF DRUIDISM. Article 26
A VIEW OF THE PROGRESS OF NAVIGATION. Article 33
ACCOUNT OF JOHN O'GROAT'S HOUSE. Article 38
MEMOIRS OF THE LATE . DR. PAUL HIFFERNAN. Article 39
SKETCH OF THE LIFE OF M. BRISSOT. Article 48
ON THE STUDY OF NATURAL PHILOSOPHY. Article 50
CHARACTER OF REGULUS. Article 55
PARLIAMENTARY PROCEEDINGS. Article 58
STRICTURES ON PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS Article 63
POETRY. Article 70
THE FIELD OF BATTLE. Article 73
MASONIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 74
MONTHLY CHRONICLE. Article 75
DEATHS. Article 80
BANKRUPTS. Article 81
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Page 31

Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

An Account Of Druidism.

( though m the time they do not all agree ) , the snakes meet in companies , and that by joining heads together and hissing , a kind of bubble is formed , which the rest , by continual hissing , blow on till it passes quite through the body , when it immediately hardens , and resembles a glass . ring , which whoever finds shall prosper in all his undertakings . The rings thus generated are called Gleinu-nadroeth , or snake-stones . They

are small glass amulets , commonly about half as wide as our fingerrings , but much thicker , of a green colour usually , though sometimes blue , and waved with red and white . " Carew says , that " the country people in Cornwall have a persuasion that the snakes breathing upon a hazel wand produce a stone ring of blue colour , in which there appears the yellow figure of a snake , and that beasts bit and envenomed , being

given some water to drink wherein this stone has been infused , will perfectly recover of the poison * . " From the animal the Druids passed to the vegetable world ; and there also displayed their powers , whilst by the charms of the misletoe , the selago , and the samolus , they prevented or repelled disease , and * every species of misfortune . They made all nature , indeed , subservient to their magical art , and rendered even the rivers and the rocks prophetic . From the undulation or bubbling of water stirred by an oak branch , or magic wand , they foretold events that were to come .

This superstition of the Druids is even now retained in the western counties . To this day the Cornish have been accustomed to consult their famous well at Madern , or rather the spirit of the well , respecting their future destiny . " Hither , " says Borlase , " come the uneasy , impatient , and superstitious , and by dropping pins f or pebbles into the water , and by shaking the . ground round the spring , so . as to raise bubbles from the bottomat a certain time of the yearmoonand day

, , , , endeavour to remove their uneasiness : yet the supposed responses serve equally to encrease the gloom of the melancholy , the suspicions of the jealous , and the passion of the enamoured . The Castalian fountain , and many others among the Grecians , were supposed to be of a prophetic nature . By dipping a fair mirror into a well , the Patraians of Greece received , as they supposed , some notice of ensuing sickness

or health from the various figures pourtrayed upon the surface . The people of Laconia cast into a pool sacred to Juno cakes of bread-corn : if the cakes sunk , good was portended ; if they swam something dreadful was to ensue . Sometimes the superstitious threw three stones into the water , and formed their-conclusions from the several turns they made in sinking . " The Druids were likewise able to communicate , by consecration , the most portentous virtues to rocks and stones , which could determine the succession of princes or the fate of empires . To the Rocking , or Logan Stone | , in particular , they had recourse to confirm

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