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  • THE BOOK EGYPT.
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Table Of Contents.

TABLE OF CONTENTS .

PAGF . REVIEWSFurness , Past and Present 3 5 Hogg ' s Secret Code for Letters or Telegrams 325 THE BOOK EGYPT 3 5 THE PRINCE AND PRINCESS OF W ALES AT

READING 326 & 3 7 S UMMER BANQUET OF L ODGE SINCERITY , NO . 189 , PLYMOUTH 3 7 THE

CRAFTMetropolitan 3 « Middlesex 3 ^ Provincial ... ••• ¦¦• — 3 £ ROYAL ARCH - 3 > MARK MASONRY 3 9

LINES ... J 9 I NSTALLATION OF THE EARL FERRERS 329 PICNIC OF THE OLD G LOBE LODGE , SCARBRO' 329 BIRTHS , MARRIAGES , AND DEATHS 330 ANSWERS TO CORRESPONDENTS 330 THE LESSON OF A LIFE 33 °

MULTUM IN PARVO 33 1 « 33 ORIGINAL C ORRESPONDENCEHere me again ... ... ... ... 332 Something Wrong 33 2 An Erratum 33 Board of Benevolence 33

J OTTINGS FROM MASONIC J OURNALS 333 ANNUAL C OMMUNICATION OF G RAND LODGE OF NEW YORK 333 . 334 & 335 POETRYSummertidc is coming 335 Cleveland 335 MASONIC MEETINGS FOR NEXT WEEK 335 THE GRAND C O . MMANDERY OF MICHAGAN ... 336

Reviews.

Reviews .

Furness , Past and Present ; its History and Antiquities . Part I . By G . MARKHAM TWEDDELL , F . S . A . Published by J . Richardson , Barrow-in-Furness .

Bro . Tweddell , the eminent antiquarian , is again delving in the vich mines of the past , and illustrating the prosaic facts of the present by the results of his untiring researches .

The important district of Lancashire , now known as Furness , comprises an area fertile in relics of a former age , as well as in actual evidences of material wealth , and in compiling its history , Bro . Tweddell is

not insensible to its varied claims upon our interest as a land full of historical reminiscences , as well as a centre of commercial activity . The work , in such experienced hands , is sure to be well and faithfully done ,

and judging from the illustrations already given , which include a splendid portrait of His Grace the Duke of Devonshire , to whom the history is dedicated , as well as

views of well-known spots in the locality , wc may safely say that the artist ' s skill will be found worthy of the rich intellectual treat which the author is preparing for all lovers of antiquarian studies .

The issue will be complete in twenty monthly parts , and each part will contain three full-page engravings , cither portraits

of distinguished residents or views of the principal objects of interests in Furness , and the surrounding neighbourhood , which is celebrated for its magnificent scenery .

Hogg ' s Secret Code for Letters or Telegrams . Hogg , 122 , Flcc ' L-strcet . The system designed by this enterprising publisher is , though simple , certainly the most effective yet introduced to public

notice , and must prove invaluable to all who have occasion to communicate secretly with others , as it obviates the possibility of the cipher being read unless the receiver of the message has a previous arrangement

with tne sender . By the adoption of a key word the interpretation is perfectly easy , without it , quite impossible . Wc cordially commend the code to the attention of our readers at home and abroad .

The Book Egypt.

THE BOOK EGYPT .

There is enough of symbolism in Freemasonry to excite in the minds of thoughtful Masons , who " make the liberal arts and sciences their study , " to induce them to extend their enquiries into the systems of

theosophy and morality , in which symbolism was more largely and reconditely employed . The field of investigation is a very large one . All the ancient teachers of wisdom made use of symbols in the

initiation of aspirants , and in all their subsequent education ; and none of the ancient philosophers or theosophics can be understood by one who is ignorant of symbolic science . Egypt was the cradle of this

science , and it is to that extraordinary country that we trace back the preservation and promulgation of what is called occult science , or Hermetic Magianism . Eliphas Levi has much and curious learning on this

interesting subject in his work , " Histoire de la Magie , " and it occurs to me that a translation of a small portion of what he has written may be interesting to some of the readers of Tl-IE FREEMASON .

It is in Egypt , as he observes , that magianism is complete as a universal science , with its dogmas systematically and perfectly formulated . Nothing surpasses ,

nothing even equals , as a resume of all the doctrines ofthe old world , the few sentences engraved on a precious stone by Hermes , and known as T / ie Ei ' ucrald Table . The unity of beingand the unity of harmonies , whether

ascending or descending the progressive and proportional ladder of the Word ; the immutable law of equilibrium , and the proportional progress of universal analogies ; the agreement of the idea with the Word .

giving the measure of agreement between the Creator and the created ; the necessary mathematics of infinity proved by the measure of a single corner ofthe finite ; all this is expressed in a single proposition by the Egyptian hierophant : —

" That which is superior like that which is inferior , and that which is below like that which is above , go to form the wonders of the whole . "

Then comes the revelation and learned description of thecrcative agent—of thepantoinorphian fire , of the principal means of the occult power , in a word , of the astral light . " The sun is its father , the moon is its mother , the wind bore it in its womb . "

Ihus , this light emanates from the sun , receives its regular motion and influences from the moon , and has the atmosphere for its receptacle and prison . "The earth is its nurse . " That is to say , it is balanced

and put it motion by the central heat of the earth . "It is the universal principal , the TELESMA of the world . "

Hermes next teaches how this light , which is also a force , may be used as a lever and a universal dissolvent ; also as a formative and coagulativc agent .

How this light must , from bodies wherein it is latent , be drawn , in the condition of fire , of motion , of splendour , of luminous gas , of ardent water , and , finally , of ignited earth , to imitate , by the aid of these divers substances , all the creations of nature .

The Emerald Table is the whole of magianism in a single page . The other works attributed to Hermes , such as Gyutandrc , Asclcpius , & c , arc generally believed by critics to . be

productions of the Alexandrian school . They nevertheless contain the Hermetic traditions preserved in the sancturies of theurgy . The doctrines of Hermes cannot be lost to those who have the keys of symbolism .

The Book Egypt.

The ruins of Egypt are like scattered pages , which we may yet collect , and with them reconstruct the entire Book ; a prodigious book whose capital letters were temples , whose phrases were cities , punctuated with obelisks and sphinxes .

The division of Egypt was a magian synthesis ; the names of its provinces corresponded to the figures of the sacred numbers : upper Egypt , a figure of the celestial world and country of the extatics : lower

Egypt , a symbol ofthe earth ; and middle or central , Egypt , the country of science and of high intitations . Each of these three parts was divided into ten provinces , called Nomes , and placed under the

special protection of gods . These gods , thirty in number , grouped in threes , express , symbolically , all the conceptions of the ternary in the decade , that is to say , the triple signification—natural ,

philosophical and religious—ofthe absolute ideas primitively attached to numbers . Thus , the triple unity , or the original ternary ; the triple binary , or the reflection of the triangle , which forms the star of Solomon ; the triple

ternary , or the whole idea under each of its three terms ; the triple quaternary , that is to say the cyclical number of the astral revolutions , & c . The geography of Egypt ,

under Sesostns , is a pantacle , that is to say , a symbolical resume of all the magian dogma of Zoroaster , recovered and formulated by Hermes .

The land of Egypt was a great book , and the teachings of this book were repeated , translated in painting , in sculpture , in architecture , in all the towns and in all the temples . Even the desert had its eternal

teachings , and its word of stone is seated at the base of the pyramids , those limits of human intelligence before which a colossal sphynx has for so many ages seemed to meditate , while slowly burying itself in the

sand . Its head , mutilated by the ages that have passed over it , still continues above its tomb , as if waiting for a human voice to come and explain the problem of the pyramids to the new world .

Lgypt is to us the cradle of science and wisdom ; she clothes the dogmas ofthe first Zoroaster with images , if not richer , at least truer and chaster , than those of India . The sacrcdotal art , and the royal art there

formed adepts by initiation , and initiation was not confined within the egotistic limits of castes . There , the Hebrew slave was seen to initiate himself , and arrive at the rank of prime minister ; perhaps of high priest , for

he espoused the daughter of an Egyptian priest , and the priesthood never misallicd themselves . Joseph realised in Egypt the idea of communism ; he rendered the priesthood and the state the sole proprietors

of land , and consequently the arbiters of labour and of riches . * He thus abolished misery , and made the whole of Egypt one patriarchial family . Joseph , it is known , owed his elevation to his skill in the

interpretation of dreams , a science in which the Christians of our day refuse to believe , although the ) ' admit that the Bible , in which the wonderfuldivinations of Joseph arc recorded , is the word of the Holy Spirit .

1 he absolute hieroglyphic science had for its basis an alphabet in which all the gods were letters , all the letters ideas , all the ideas numbers , and all the numbers perfect signs .

This hieroglyphic alphabet , with which Moses formed the great secret of his Cabala , and which he took from the Egyptians ( for

according to the Sepher Jezirah it came from Abraham)—this alphabet is the famous Book of Thot , believed by Count de Gebclin to exist in our own dav' under .

“The Freemason: 1870-07-09, Page 1” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 30 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fvl/issues/fvl_09071870/page/1/.
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Title Category Page
TABLE OF CONTENTS. Article 1
Reviews. Article 1
THE BOOK EGYPT. Article 1
THE PRINCE AND PRINCESS OF WALES AT READING. Article 2
SUMMER BANQUET OF LODGE SINCERITY. No. 180. PLYMOUTH. Article 3
Reports of Masonic Meetings. Article 4
INSTALLATION OF THE EARL FERRERS. Article 5
PICNIC OF THE OLD GLOBE LODGE SCARBOROUGH. Article 5
Untitled Ad 6
Foreign and Colonial Agents. Article 6
Births, Marriages, and Deaths. Article 6
Answers to Correspondents. Article 6
Untitled Article 6
Untitled Article 6
THE LESSON OF A LIFE. Article 6
Multum in Parbo, or Masonic Notes and Queries. Article 7
Original Correspondence. Article 8
Jottings form Masonic Journals. Article 9
ANNUAL COMMUNICATION OF THE GRAND LODGE OF NEW YORK. Article 9
Poetry. Article 11
METROPOLITAN MASONIC MEETINGS Article 11
THE GRAND COMMANDERY OF MICHIGAN. Article 12
Untitled Ad 12
Untitled Ad 12
Untitled Ad 12
Untitled Ad 12
Untitled Ad 12
Untitled Ad 12
Untitled Ad 12
Untitled Ad 12
Untitled Ad 12
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Table Of Contents.

TABLE OF CONTENTS .

PAGF . REVIEWSFurness , Past and Present 3 5 Hogg ' s Secret Code for Letters or Telegrams 325 THE BOOK EGYPT 3 5 THE PRINCE AND PRINCESS OF W ALES AT

READING 326 & 3 7 S UMMER BANQUET OF L ODGE SINCERITY , NO . 189 , PLYMOUTH 3 7 THE

CRAFTMetropolitan 3 « Middlesex 3 ^ Provincial ... ••• ¦¦• — 3 £ ROYAL ARCH - 3 > MARK MASONRY 3 9

LINES ... J 9 I NSTALLATION OF THE EARL FERRERS 329 PICNIC OF THE OLD G LOBE LODGE , SCARBRO' 329 BIRTHS , MARRIAGES , AND DEATHS 330 ANSWERS TO CORRESPONDENTS 330 THE LESSON OF A LIFE 33 °

MULTUM IN PARVO 33 1 « 33 ORIGINAL C ORRESPONDENCEHere me again ... ... ... ... 332 Something Wrong 33 2 An Erratum 33 Board of Benevolence 33

J OTTINGS FROM MASONIC J OURNALS 333 ANNUAL C OMMUNICATION OF G RAND LODGE OF NEW YORK 333 . 334 & 335 POETRYSummertidc is coming 335 Cleveland 335 MASONIC MEETINGS FOR NEXT WEEK 335 THE GRAND C O . MMANDERY OF MICHAGAN ... 336

Reviews.

Reviews .

Furness , Past and Present ; its History and Antiquities . Part I . By G . MARKHAM TWEDDELL , F . S . A . Published by J . Richardson , Barrow-in-Furness .

Bro . Tweddell , the eminent antiquarian , is again delving in the vich mines of the past , and illustrating the prosaic facts of the present by the results of his untiring researches .

The important district of Lancashire , now known as Furness , comprises an area fertile in relics of a former age , as well as in actual evidences of material wealth , and in compiling its history , Bro . Tweddell is

not insensible to its varied claims upon our interest as a land full of historical reminiscences , as well as a centre of commercial activity . The work , in such experienced hands , is sure to be well and faithfully done ,

and judging from the illustrations already given , which include a splendid portrait of His Grace the Duke of Devonshire , to whom the history is dedicated , as well as

views of well-known spots in the locality , wc may safely say that the artist ' s skill will be found worthy of the rich intellectual treat which the author is preparing for all lovers of antiquarian studies .

The issue will be complete in twenty monthly parts , and each part will contain three full-page engravings , cither portraits

of distinguished residents or views of the principal objects of interests in Furness , and the surrounding neighbourhood , which is celebrated for its magnificent scenery .

Hogg ' s Secret Code for Letters or Telegrams . Hogg , 122 , Flcc ' L-strcet . The system designed by this enterprising publisher is , though simple , certainly the most effective yet introduced to public

notice , and must prove invaluable to all who have occasion to communicate secretly with others , as it obviates the possibility of the cipher being read unless the receiver of the message has a previous arrangement

with tne sender . By the adoption of a key word the interpretation is perfectly easy , without it , quite impossible . Wc cordially commend the code to the attention of our readers at home and abroad .

The Book Egypt.

THE BOOK EGYPT .

There is enough of symbolism in Freemasonry to excite in the minds of thoughtful Masons , who " make the liberal arts and sciences their study , " to induce them to extend their enquiries into the systems of

theosophy and morality , in which symbolism was more largely and reconditely employed . The field of investigation is a very large one . All the ancient teachers of wisdom made use of symbols in the

initiation of aspirants , and in all their subsequent education ; and none of the ancient philosophers or theosophics can be understood by one who is ignorant of symbolic science . Egypt was the cradle of this

science , and it is to that extraordinary country that we trace back the preservation and promulgation of what is called occult science , or Hermetic Magianism . Eliphas Levi has much and curious learning on this

interesting subject in his work , " Histoire de la Magie , " and it occurs to me that a translation of a small portion of what he has written may be interesting to some of the readers of Tl-IE FREEMASON .

It is in Egypt , as he observes , that magianism is complete as a universal science , with its dogmas systematically and perfectly formulated . Nothing surpasses ,

nothing even equals , as a resume of all the doctrines ofthe old world , the few sentences engraved on a precious stone by Hermes , and known as T / ie Ei ' ucrald Table . The unity of beingand the unity of harmonies , whether

ascending or descending the progressive and proportional ladder of the Word ; the immutable law of equilibrium , and the proportional progress of universal analogies ; the agreement of the idea with the Word .

giving the measure of agreement between the Creator and the created ; the necessary mathematics of infinity proved by the measure of a single corner ofthe finite ; all this is expressed in a single proposition by the Egyptian hierophant : —

" That which is superior like that which is inferior , and that which is below like that which is above , go to form the wonders of the whole . "

Then comes the revelation and learned description of thecrcative agent—of thepantoinorphian fire , of the principal means of the occult power , in a word , of the astral light . " The sun is its father , the moon is its mother , the wind bore it in its womb . "

Ihus , this light emanates from the sun , receives its regular motion and influences from the moon , and has the atmosphere for its receptacle and prison . "The earth is its nurse . " That is to say , it is balanced

and put it motion by the central heat of the earth . "It is the universal principal , the TELESMA of the world . "

Hermes next teaches how this light , which is also a force , may be used as a lever and a universal dissolvent ; also as a formative and coagulativc agent .

How this light must , from bodies wherein it is latent , be drawn , in the condition of fire , of motion , of splendour , of luminous gas , of ardent water , and , finally , of ignited earth , to imitate , by the aid of these divers substances , all the creations of nature .

The Emerald Table is the whole of magianism in a single page . The other works attributed to Hermes , such as Gyutandrc , Asclcpius , & c , arc generally believed by critics to . be

productions of the Alexandrian school . They nevertheless contain the Hermetic traditions preserved in the sancturies of theurgy . The doctrines of Hermes cannot be lost to those who have the keys of symbolism .

The Book Egypt.

The ruins of Egypt are like scattered pages , which we may yet collect , and with them reconstruct the entire Book ; a prodigious book whose capital letters were temples , whose phrases were cities , punctuated with obelisks and sphinxes .

The division of Egypt was a magian synthesis ; the names of its provinces corresponded to the figures of the sacred numbers : upper Egypt , a figure of the celestial world and country of the extatics : lower

Egypt , a symbol ofthe earth ; and middle or central , Egypt , the country of science and of high intitations . Each of these three parts was divided into ten provinces , called Nomes , and placed under the

special protection of gods . These gods , thirty in number , grouped in threes , express , symbolically , all the conceptions of the ternary in the decade , that is to say , the triple signification—natural ,

philosophical and religious—ofthe absolute ideas primitively attached to numbers . Thus , the triple unity , or the original ternary ; the triple binary , or the reflection of the triangle , which forms the star of Solomon ; the triple

ternary , or the whole idea under each of its three terms ; the triple quaternary , that is to say the cyclical number of the astral revolutions , & c . The geography of Egypt ,

under Sesostns , is a pantacle , that is to say , a symbolical resume of all the magian dogma of Zoroaster , recovered and formulated by Hermes .

The land of Egypt was a great book , and the teachings of this book were repeated , translated in painting , in sculpture , in architecture , in all the towns and in all the temples . Even the desert had its eternal

teachings , and its word of stone is seated at the base of the pyramids , those limits of human intelligence before which a colossal sphynx has for so many ages seemed to meditate , while slowly burying itself in the

sand . Its head , mutilated by the ages that have passed over it , still continues above its tomb , as if waiting for a human voice to come and explain the problem of the pyramids to the new world .

Lgypt is to us the cradle of science and wisdom ; she clothes the dogmas ofthe first Zoroaster with images , if not richer , at least truer and chaster , than those of India . The sacrcdotal art , and the royal art there

formed adepts by initiation , and initiation was not confined within the egotistic limits of castes . There , the Hebrew slave was seen to initiate himself , and arrive at the rank of prime minister ; perhaps of high priest , for

he espoused the daughter of an Egyptian priest , and the priesthood never misallicd themselves . Joseph realised in Egypt the idea of communism ; he rendered the priesthood and the state the sole proprietors

of land , and consequently the arbiters of labour and of riches . * He thus abolished misery , and made the whole of Egypt one patriarchial family . Joseph , it is known , owed his elevation to his skill in the

interpretation of dreams , a science in which the Christians of our day refuse to believe , although the ) ' admit that the Bible , in which the wonderfuldivinations of Joseph arc recorded , is the word of the Holy Spirit .

1 he absolute hieroglyphic science had for its basis an alphabet in which all the gods were letters , all the letters ideas , all the ideas numbers , and all the numbers perfect signs .

This hieroglyphic alphabet , with which Moses formed the great secret of his Cabala , and which he took from the Egyptians ( for

according to the Sepher Jezirah it came from Abraham)—this alphabet is the famous Book of Thot , believed by Count de Gebclin to exist in our own dav' under .

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