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  • June 1, 1794
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  • ACCOUNT OF DRUIDISM.
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The Freemasons' Magazine, June 1, 1794: Page 32

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Account Of Druidism.

in this island . If the Druids had been Celtic priests , they would have spread with the several divisions of the Celts . They would have been eminent among the Germans ; they would have been con * spicuous , though less visible , among the Gauls . But in Germany there were no Druids ; and Gaul had none till she imported them from Britain . In short , we need not hesitate to declarer , that the Druidism of Britain was Asiatic .

The Danmonii , transplanted into the British isles , retained those eastern modes , which seemed little accordant with their new situation . And was not their worshi p of the sun so unnatural in the dreary climates of ths North , their doctrine as to the stars , . so little regarded for scientific ¦ purposes by the European nations , ¦ their sublime tenets concerning the origin of nature and of the heavens—were not all these

strongly contrasted with the reli gion of the continent ? Were not all these absolutely unknown to the Europeans , and deemed , as soon as discovered , the objects of curiosity and veneration ? Were not all these new to Ctesar ? In fret , the British Druids knew more of , thetrue origin of the mythology adopted by the Greeks . and Romans *

than the Greeks and Romans probably did themselves : and I cannot but observe , that every part of C _ esar's account of their religious tenets merits a dissertation ; for they refer to the first ages of mankind . Does Caisar any where speak thus of the Belga ;—those fugitive Germans , driven b y their stronger neighbours over the Rhine into Gaul , and afterwards , perhaps , driven from Gaul to take shelter on the seacoast of Britain ? Does he any where speak thus of one tribe or state

on the continent ?—I believe no where . The doctrines of the British Druids were peculiar to themselves in Europe—full of deep knowledge and hig h antiquity . Mr . Whitaker himself exclaims , in . a style truly oriental : " There was something in the Druidical species of " heathenism that was peculiarly calculated to arrest the attention and " impress the mind . The rudely majestic circle of stones in their " temples , the enormous Cromlech , the massy Logan , the huge Car-< c nedde , and the magnificent amphitheatres of woods , would all very < £ strongly lay hold upon that religious thoughtfulness of soul , which

" has been ever so natural to man , amid all the wrecks of humanity' •' . the monument of his former perfection ! " That Druidism then , as orig inall y existing in Devonshire and Cornwall , was immediatelytransported , in all its purity and perfection , from thc East , . seems to me extremely probable . But we have seen that this religion is not entirely consistent with itself—that though wisdom and benevolence are sometimes exhibited

as its commanding features , yet the grossest folly and inhumanity are no less prominent on other representations of it . The Phenicians , however , introducing their corrupt doctrines and degenerated rites , will account at once for these incongruities : and we have already obr served the intermixture of the Phenician with the abori g inal doctrines and ceremonies . If a Phenician colony , subsequent to the first peopling of the island , settled here about the time of Joshua , there is no doubt but they disseminated in Danmonium a vast variety of superstitions notions . At this juncture their reli g ion wa . s stained with manifold un-

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1794-06-01, Page 32” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 24 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01061794/page/32/.
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
LONDON: Article 1
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 2
THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE, OR GENERAL AND COMPLETE LIBRARY. Article 3
PRESENT STATE OF FREE MASONRY. Article 4
A SPEECH Article 9
LITERATURE. Article 14
LETTER THE FIRST. Article 14
ANECDOTES OF THE LAST CENTURY. Article 16
ACCOUNT OF A TOUR TO KILLARNEY, &c. Article 17
THE LIFE OF MRS. ANNE AYSCOUGH, OR ASKEW. Article 21
ACCOUNT OF DRUIDISM. Article 28
MASONIC ANECDOTE Article 33
REFUTATION Article 35
A SERMON Article 36
JOHN COUSTOS, FOR FREEMASONRY, Article 40
A DESCRIPTION OF ST. GEORGE'S CAVE AT GIBRALTAR. Article 45
SHORT ABSTRACT OF THE HISTORY OF GUADALOUPE. Article 46
NATURAL HISTORY OF THE JACKALL. Article 49
SPEECH OF A CREEK INDIAN, Article 50
THE USE AND ABUSE OF SPEECH. Article 52
ON SUICIDE . Article 55
PARLIAMENTARY PROCEEDINGS. Article 57
STRICTURES ON PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 61
POETRY. Article 63
VERSES Article 64
BY MR. TASKER. Article 66
ODE TO A MILITIA OFFICER. Article 66
TRUE GREATNESS. Article 67
A MASONIC SONG. Article 68
MASONIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 69
MONTHLY CHRONICLE. Article 69
PREFERMENTS. Article 74
Untitled Article 75
Untitled Article 76
BANKRUPTS. Article 77
INDEX TO THE SECOND VOLUME. Article 78
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Page 32

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

Account Of Druidism.

in this island . If the Druids had been Celtic priests , they would have spread with the several divisions of the Celts . They would have been eminent among the Germans ; they would have been con * spicuous , though less visible , among the Gauls . But in Germany there were no Druids ; and Gaul had none till she imported them from Britain . In short , we need not hesitate to declarer , that the Druidism of Britain was Asiatic .

The Danmonii , transplanted into the British isles , retained those eastern modes , which seemed little accordant with their new situation . And was not their worshi p of the sun so unnatural in the dreary climates of ths North , their doctrine as to the stars , . so little regarded for scientific ¦ purposes by the European nations , ¦ their sublime tenets concerning the origin of nature and of the heavens—were not all these

strongly contrasted with the reli gion of the continent ? Were not all these absolutely unknown to the Europeans , and deemed , as soon as discovered , the objects of curiosity and veneration ? Were not all these new to Ctesar ? In fret , the British Druids knew more of , thetrue origin of the mythology adopted by the Greeks . and Romans *

than the Greeks and Romans probably did themselves : and I cannot but observe , that every part of C _ esar's account of their religious tenets merits a dissertation ; for they refer to the first ages of mankind . Does Caisar any where speak thus of the Belga ;—those fugitive Germans , driven b y their stronger neighbours over the Rhine into Gaul , and afterwards , perhaps , driven from Gaul to take shelter on the seacoast of Britain ? Does he any where speak thus of one tribe or state

on the continent ?—I believe no where . The doctrines of the British Druids were peculiar to themselves in Europe—full of deep knowledge and hig h antiquity . Mr . Whitaker himself exclaims , in . a style truly oriental : " There was something in the Druidical species of " heathenism that was peculiarly calculated to arrest the attention and " impress the mind . The rudely majestic circle of stones in their " temples , the enormous Cromlech , the massy Logan , the huge Car-< c nedde , and the magnificent amphitheatres of woods , would all very < £ strongly lay hold upon that religious thoughtfulness of soul , which

" has been ever so natural to man , amid all the wrecks of humanity' •' . the monument of his former perfection ! " That Druidism then , as orig inall y existing in Devonshire and Cornwall , was immediatelytransported , in all its purity and perfection , from thc East , . seems to me extremely probable . But we have seen that this religion is not entirely consistent with itself—that though wisdom and benevolence are sometimes exhibited

as its commanding features , yet the grossest folly and inhumanity are no less prominent on other representations of it . The Phenicians , however , introducing their corrupt doctrines and degenerated rites , will account at once for these incongruities : and we have already obr served the intermixture of the Phenician with the abori g inal doctrines and ceremonies . If a Phenician colony , subsequent to the first peopling of the island , settled here about the time of Joshua , there is no doubt but they disseminated in Danmonium a vast variety of superstitions notions . At this juncture their reli g ion wa . s stained with manifold un-

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