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Table Of Contents.

TABLE OF CONTENTS .

PAGJ

REVIEWSThc History and Development of Gilds , and the Origin of Trade Unions ... ... ... 277 ANCIENT AND MODERN MYSTERIES 277 NOTHING TO ISE GAINED 277 MASONRY IN BUENOS AYRES 278 PLEAD BEFORE TIIY FATHER ' S THRONE 27 S LAVING FOUNDATION STONES AT LEICESTER ... 27 S

FREEMASONRY IN THE ISLE OF MAN 279 PROV . GRAND LODGE OF BERKS AND BUCKS ... 2 S 0 THE CRAFTMetropolitan ... ... ... ... . ... 280 Middlesex 280 Provincial ... ... ... ... ... 2 S 0 ROYAL

ARCHProvincial ... ... ... ... ... 281 INSTRUCTIONScotland 281 ORDERS OF CHIVALRYRed Cross of Rome and Constantine ... ... 2 S 1 Knights Templar ... 2 S 1 BIRTHS , MARRIAGES AND DEATHS 282

THE ANTIQUITY OF THE CRAFT 282 MUI . TUM IN PARVO ... ... 2 S 3 OBITUARYBro . Thomas Wescombe 283 Bro . John Harvey Boys ... ... ... 2 S 3 CONSECRATION OF A NEW LODGF . AT TOPSHAM ... 284

FREEMASONRY IN EGYPT 2 S 5 J OTTINGS FROM MASONIC J OURNALS 285 THE FREEMASONS' LIFEBOAT 286 ORIGINAL CORRESPONDENCE 286 & . 2 S 7 THE LEGEND OF J URAL 2 S 7 MASONIC MEETINGS FOR NEXT WEEK 2 S 7

Reviews.

Reviews .

0 The History and Development of Gilds , and the Origin of Trades Unions ; by LujO BRENTANO , Doctor of Laws and Philosophy . Triibner & Co ., 60 ,

Paternosterrow . ( Concluded from page 24 \ . ) We cannot better finish our review of this admirable work than by quoting Dr . Brentano ' s concluding remarks , with Mr . Furnivall ' s note annexed r—

" I shall be satisfied now if I have proved that the spread of disorder called forth at once in each single trade Gild-like organizations of those suffering by it , to maintain the old order , or to create a new one . I

wish only further to point to the fact that the English , among whom tlie old Gilds probably originated , have in this new movement again preceded all other nations . As each new political era has begun in England

—whether they were barons who wrung from King John the Magna Charta Libcrtatum , or the middle-classes who , in the seventeenth century , obtained here first the dominion in

the State—so the era of the working-classes comes first to development on English soil . And as in the earlier Middle Ages from the days of Charlemagne the Frith-Gilds , and in the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries

the Craft-Gilds , so now the Trade-Unions will be thc great engines for obtaining the sway . Already since 1824 they have enjoyed a kind of recognition ; and already they have fought contests quite as fierce as ,

if not fiercer than , those of the old craftsmen against the patricians . Thc history of their sufferings since the end of the eighteenth century , and of the privations endured for their independence , is a real record of

heroism . It is only to be hoped that now , when they are free from all legal restrictions , they may use only—instead of the arms of violence , which belong to former times—the legal means which belong to our days , and

which are thrown open to them by thc franchise . May the English working-men , like the English bavous and middle-classes in former times , be a bright example in the attainment of freedom to their brethren on the

Continent ! "P . S . Attention may be called to the 'History of . ' the Holy Trinity Guild at Sleaford [ in Lincolnshire ] , with an account of its Miracle-Plays , Religious Mysteries ,

Reviews.

and Shows , as practised in the Fifteenth Century , ' & c , by the Rev . G . Oliver , D . D ., Lincoln , 1837 . 5 s . The account of the Gild—a Social or Religious Gild—is

provokingly meagre , and the amount of talk in the book very great ; but it states , at p . 50 , that an ancient MS . Compotus Book belonging to the Gild was then in the possession of Dr . Yerburgh , the Vicar ; and that it

ranges from A . D . 1477 to 1545 , when the Gild was dissolved at the Reformation , though two later informal entries in 1585 and 1613 are made in it . I have sent inquiries after this book . Dr . Yerburgh ' s

History of Sleaford may contain further information about this Gild . Dr . Oliver , at p . 52 , note 20 , states the income of the Sleaford Gild at £ § 0 , while that of the three

principal Gilds at Boston was less , the Gild of Corpus Christi there being valued at £ ^ 2 , that of the Virgin at £ 24 , and that of St . Peter and St . Paul at £ \ 0 3 s . —F . J . F . "

Ancient And Modern Mysteries.

ANCIENT AND MODERN MYSTERIES .

Bv BRO . ROBERT WENTWORTH LITTLE , Provincial Grand Secretary , Middlesex ; President oj ihe London Literary Union ; Editor of " The Rosicrttcianf &* c . ( Continued from page 231 . ) The Assassins continued for many years to

exercise the power derived from the terror with which they were regarded by all men ; but , at length , their great stronghold , Alamoot , was captured , and tlie leading chiefs put to the

sword . During their horrible career the Assassins were several times brought in contact with the Knights Templar , of whom I shall have occasion to write when more at leisure , and it appears that the sect of Isma'ilites is even now in existence

botli in Syria and Persia . " But , " to again quote " Secret Societies , " " like that of the Anabaptists , it has lost its terrors , and the Ismailite doctrine is now merely one of the speculative heresies of Islam . The Syrian Isma'ilites dwell

in eighteen villages around Massyat , and pay an annual sum of 16 , 500 piastres to the Governor of Hania , who nominates their sheik or emir . They are divided into two sects or parties , the Sooweidanee , so named from one of their former

sheiks , and the Khisrewee , so called on account of their great reverence for Kliiser , the guardian of the Well of Life . They are all externally rigid observers of the precepts of Islam , but they are said to believe in the divinity of Ali , in the

uncreated light as the origin of all things , and in the sheik Rasheed ed-deen Sinan as the last representative of God upon earth . " The Persian Isma'ilites dwell chiefly in Roodbar , but they are met all over the East , and even

appear as traders on the banks of the Ganges . Their imam , whose pedigree they trace up to Ismail , the son of Jaaffer-es-Sadik , resides , under the protection of the Shah of Persia , at the village of Khekh , in the district of Koom . As ,

according to their doctrine , he is an incarnate ray of the Divinity , they hold him in the utmost veneration , and make pilgrimages from the most distant places to obtain his blessing . " We have thus traced the origin , the growth

and the decline of this formidable society , only to be paralleled by that of the Jesuits in extent of power and unity of plan and purpose . Unlike this last , however , its object was purely evil , and

its career was one of blood ; it has therefore left no deeds to which its apologists might appeal in its defence . Its history , notwithstanding , will always form a curious and instructive chapter in that of the human race . "

I reserve for future papers various notes which I have collected respecting the Templars , the Fehm-gerichte , the Rosicrucians , tlie Inquisitors ,

the Jesuits , Carbonari , and other mysterious associations down to the present day , and may explain that , as what I have written under this head was originally only intended for the " Rosi-

Ancient And Modern Mysteries.

crucian , " a quarterly magazine , I have found it impossible to spare time for a regular weekly contribution . The second part of my remarks under the head

of " Ancient and Modern Mysteries will therefore take the shape of occasional notes to be supplied as the various demands on my time will best admit .

Nothing To Be Gained.

NOTHING TO BE GAINED .

[ From the " American Masonic Mirror "for May . ] A few modern writers upon Masonry are en gaged in the profitless task of labouring to prove that Masonry , as an Order , dates back only to the year 1717 . That its ancient traditions are

mythical . That its hoary aspect is all assumed . That imillions of Masons , including the most wise and learned men the earth has ever produced , have lived and died believing firmly in a hallucination , which these modern wiseacres seek

to explore . AVe do not intend to enter into an unprofitable controversy upon this subject ; our traditions require no defence . If deceived , we are happy in our ignorance ; and do not propose to change

our views upon this subject upon the presentation of other conjectures advanced in controversion of the history of Masonry , which , according to their own admissions , has been held as correct by the wise and learned for one hundred and

fifty years , at least . But supposing these men should succeed in convincing themselves , and their readers , and that we have been for one hundred and fifty years the victims of deception , and that

Masonry is not that ancient institution we have firmly believed it to be , but of comparatively modern date—what has been gained by this partially successful attempt to rob the institution

of its hoary character and jancient traditions ? Suppose it could be satisfactorily proven that the Order had its birth in the year 1717 , and it came forth full fledged at that date—who or what could receive the least benefit from any such

demonstration ? Is it not rather akin to the insane

attempts that have been made from time to time to bring the Great Light of Masonry , the Holy Bible , intodisrepute by futile attempts to discredit its authenticity ? Supposing that poor frail man should succeed , to the satisfaction of his puny

judgment , in proving that the Bible was not what is claimed for it—that instead of its being the Word of God , it is only a modern book of man ! What has the world gained ? What has poor man gained thereby ? What rather has he

not lost—and what has not the world lost ? Take away this Great Light , the only light that penetrates " beyond the veil , " and what is there left for man ? Take from man the hope of a future life , and this world would be a dreary

existence indeed . What would the few fleeting years of disappointment , misery , suffering , and pain , mixed with a small portion of earthly happiness , doled out in sparing quantities , amount to ? Take away all hope of the future life , and

hope itself would be blotted out , and the world become a carnival of crime , and mankind one great , mad suicide . The Bible is the world ' s sheet anchor . On it the world ' s hopes are based . It is a book containing the best and

most holy precepts . It teaches of the life to come . It is the only source of food for a craving soul . It is a book of the most perfect laws , the most sublime poetry , and most ancient history . It meets the wants of our spiritual

natures , and to it let us cling , as the best we have in this world ; the only compass on the sea of life ; our only chart of the haven to which we are all hastening ; our moral and Masonic trestle board , Yes , better cling to it though we

know it to be of human origin ! Why will man insanely attempt to put out this great Light , in whose wake follow civilisation , refinement , education , morality , and our bright hopes of a

better life , when nothing is to be gained thereby , but everything to be lost ? There is a class of men whose unsatisfied natures are never at ease ; who deem it their province to be for ever pulling down instead of

“The Freemason: 1870-06-11, Page 1” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 26 July 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fvl/issues/fvl_11061870/page/1/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
TABLE OF CONTENTS. Article 1
Reviews. Article 1
ANCIENT AND MODERN MYSTERIES. Article 1
NOTHING TO BE GAINED. Article 1
MASONRY IN BUENOS AYRES. BY FINLAV M. KING. Article 2
LAYING of the FOUNDATION STONES of ST. FAUNS and ST. MARK'S at LEICESTER. Article 2
FREEMASONRY IN THE ISLE OF MAN. Article 3
PROVINCIAL GRAND LODGE OF BERKS AND BUCKS. Article 4
Reports of Masonic Meetings. Article 4
ROYAL ARCH. Article 5
INSTRUCTION. Article 5
ORDERS OF CHIVALRY. Article 5
Untitled Ad 6
Foreign and Colonial Agents. Article 6
Births, Marriages, and Deaths. Article 6
Untitled Article 6
Untitled Article 6
Untitled Article 6
THE ANTIQUITY OF THE CRAFT. Article 6
Multum in Parbo, or Masonic Notes and Queries. Article 7
Obituary. Article 7
BRO. JOHN HARVEY BOYS. Article 7
CONSECRATION of a NEW LODGE at TOPSHAM. Article 8
Jottings from Masonic Journals. Article 9
FREEMASONRY IN EGYPT. Article 9
THE FREEMASONS' LIFE BOAT. Article 10
Original Correspondence. Article 10
METROPOLITAN MASONIC MEETINGS Article 11
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
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 .

PAGJ

REVIEWSThc History and Development of Gilds , and the Origin of Trade Unions ... ... ... 277 ANCIENT AND MODERN MYSTERIES 277 NOTHING TO ISE GAINED 277 MASONRY IN BUENOS AYRES 278 PLEAD BEFORE TIIY FATHER ' S THRONE 27 S LAVING FOUNDATION STONES AT LEICESTER ... 27 S

FREEMASONRY IN THE ISLE OF MAN 279 PROV . GRAND LODGE OF BERKS AND BUCKS ... 2 S 0 THE CRAFTMetropolitan ... ... ... ... . ... 280 Middlesex 280 Provincial ... ... ... ... ... 2 S 0 ROYAL

ARCHProvincial ... ... ... ... ... 281 INSTRUCTIONScotland 281 ORDERS OF CHIVALRYRed Cross of Rome and Constantine ... ... 2 S 1 Knights Templar ... 2 S 1 BIRTHS , MARRIAGES AND DEATHS 282

THE ANTIQUITY OF THE CRAFT 282 MUI . TUM IN PARVO ... ... 2 S 3 OBITUARYBro . Thomas Wescombe 283 Bro . John Harvey Boys ... ... ... 2 S 3 CONSECRATION OF A NEW LODGF . AT TOPSHAM ... 284

FREEMASONRY IN EGYPT 2 S 5 J OTTINGS FROM MASONIC J OURNALS 285 THE FREEMASONS' LIFEBOAT 286 ORIGINAL CORRESPONDENCE 286 & . 2 S 7 THE LEGEND OF J URAL 2 S 7 MASONIC MEETINGS FOR NEXT WEEK 2 S 7

Reviews.

Reviews .

0 The History and Development of Gilds , and the Origin of Trades Unions ; by LujO BRENTANO , Doctor of Laws and Philosophy . Triibner & Co ., 60 ,

Paternosterrow . ( Concluded from page 24 \ . ) We cannot better finish our review of this admirable work than by quoting Dr . Brentano ' s concluding remarks , with Mr . Furnivall ' s note annexed r—

" I shall be satisfied now if I have proved that the spread of disorder called forth at once in each single trade Gild-like organizations of those suffering by it , to maintain the old order , or to create a new one . I

wish only further to point to the fact that the English , among whom tlie old Gilds probably originated , have in this new movement again preceded all other nations . As each new political era has begun in England

—whether they were barons who wrung from King John the Magna Charta Libcrtatum , or the middle-classes who , in the seventeenth century , obtained here first the dominion in

the State—so the era of the working-classes comes first to development on English soil . And as in the earlier Middle Ages from the days of Charlemagne the Frith-Gilds , and in the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries

the Craft-Gilds , so now the Trade-Unions will be thc great engines for obtaining the sway . Already since 1824 they have enjoyed a kind of recognition ; and already they have fought contests quite as fierce as ,

if not fiercer than , those of the old craftsmen against the patricians . Thc history of their sufferings since the end of the eighteenth century , and of the privations endured for their independence , is a real record of

heroism . It is only to be hoped that now , when they are free from all legal restrictions , they may use only—instead of the arms of violence , which belong to former times—the legal means which belong to our days , and

which are thrown open to them by thc franchise . May the English working-men , like the English bavous and middle-classes in former times , be a bright example in the attainment of freedom to their brethren on the

Continent ! "P . S . Attention may be called to the 'History of . ' the Holy Trinity Guild at Sleaford [ in Lincolnshire ] , with an account of its Miracle-Plays , Religious Mysteries ,

Reviews.

and Shows , as practised in the Fifteenth Century , ' & c , by the Rev . G . Oliver , D . D ., Lincoln , 1837 . 5 s . The account of the Gild—a Social or Religious Gild—is

provokingly meagre , and the amount of talk in the book very great ; but it states , at p . 50 , that an ancient MS . Compotus Book belonging to the Gild was then in the possession of Dr . Yerburgh , the Vicar ; and that it

ranges from A . D . 1477 to 1545 , when the Gild was dissolved at the Reformation , though two later informal entries in 1585 and 1613 are made in it . I have sent inquiries after this book . Dr . Yerburgh ' s

History of Sleaford may contain further information about this Gild . Dr . Oliver , at p . 52 , note 20 , states the income of the Sleaford Gild at £ § 0 , while that of the three

principal Gilds at Boston was less , the Gild of Corpus Christi there being valued at £ ^ 2 , that of the Virgin at £ 24 , and that of St . Peter and St . Paul at £ \ 0 3 s . —F . J . F . "

Ancient And Modern Mysteries.

ANCIENT AND MODERN MYSTERIES .

Bv BRO . ROBERT WENTWORTH LITTLE , Provincial Grand Secretary , Middlesex ; President oj ihe London Literary Union ; Editor of " The Rosicrttcianf &* c . ( Continued from page 231 . ) The Assassins continued for many years to

exercise the power derived from the terror with which they were regarded by all men ; but , at length , their great stronghold , Alamoot , was captured , and tlie leading chiefs put to the

sword . During their horrible career the Assassins were several times brought in contact with the Knights Templar , of whom I shall have occasion to write when more at leisure , and it appears that the sect of Isma'ilites is even now in existence

botli in Syria and Persia . " But , " to again quote " Secret Societies , " " like that of the Anabaptists , it has lost its terrors , and the Ismailite doctrine is now merely one of the speculative heresies of Islam . The Syrian Isma'ilites dwell

in eighteen villages around Massyat , and pay an annual sum of 16 , 500 piastres to the Governor of Hania , who nominates their sheik or emir . They are divided into two sects or parties , the Sooweidanee , so named from one of their former

sheiks , and the Khisrewee , so called on account of their great reverence for Kliiser , the guardian of the Well of Life . They are all externally rigid observers of the precepts of Islam , but they are said to believe in the divinity of Ali , in the

uncreated light as the origin of all things , and in the sheik Rasheed ed-deen Sinan as the last representative of God upon earth . " The Persian Isma'ilites dwell chiefly in Roodbar , but they are met all over the East , and even

appear as traders on the banks of the Ganges . Their imam , whose pedigree they trace up to Ismail , the son of Jaaffer-es-Sadik , resides , under the protection of the Shah of Persia , at the village of Khekh , in the district of Koom . As ,

according to their doctrine , he is an incarnate ray of the Divinity , they hold him in the utmost veneration , and make pilgrimages from the most distant places to obtain his blessing . " We have thus traced the origin , the growth

and the decline of this formidable society , only to be paralleled by that of the Jesuits in extent of power and unity of plan and purpose . Unlike this last , however , its object was purely evil , and

its career was one of blood ; it has therefore left no deeds to which its apologists might appeal in its defence . Its history , notwithstanding , will always form a curious and instructive chapter in that of the human race . "

I reserve for future papers various notes which I have collected respecting the Templars , the Fehm-gerichte , the Rosicrucians , tlie Inquisitors ,

the Jesuits , Carbonari , and other mysterious associations down to the present day , and may explain that , as what I have written under this head was originally only intended for the " Rosi-

Ancient And Modern Mysteries.

crucian , " a quarterly magazine , I have found it impossible to spare time for a regular weekly contribution . The second part of my remarks under the head

of " Ancient and Modern Mysteries will therefore take the shape of occasional notes to be supplied as the various demands on my time will best admit .

Nothing To Be Gained.

NOTHING TO BE GAINED .

[ From the " American Masonic Mirror "for May . ] A few modern writers upon Masonry are en gaged in the profitless task of labouring to prove that Masonry , as an Order , dates back only to the year 1717 . That its ancient traditions are

mythical . That its hoary aspect is all assumed . That imillions of Masons , including the most wise and learned men the earth has ever produced , have lived and died believing firmly in a hallucination , which these modern wiseacres seek

to explore . AVe do not intend to enter into an unprofitable controversy upon this subject ; our traditions require no defence . If deceived , we are happy in our ignorance ; and do not propose to change

our views upon this subject upon the presentation of other conjectures advanced in controversion of the history of Masonry , which , according to their own admissions , has been held as correct by the wise and learned for one hundred and

fifty years , at least . But supposing these men should succeed in convincing themselves , and their readers , and that we have been for one hundred and fifty years the victims of deception , and that

Masonry is not that ancient institution we have firmly believed it to be , but of comparatively modern date—what has been gained by this partially successful attempt to rob the institution

of its hoary character and jancient traditions ? Suppose it could be satisfactorily proven that the Order had its birth in the year 1717 , and it came forth full fledged at that date—who or what could receive the least benefit from any such

demonstration ? Is it not rather akin to the insane

attempts that have been made from time to time to bring the Great Light of Masonry , the Holy Bible , intodisrepute by futile attempts to discredit its authenticity ? Supposing that poor frail man should succeed , to the satisfaction of his puny

judgment , in proving that the Bible was not what is claimed for it—that instead of its being the Word of God , it is only a modern book of man ! What has the world gained ? What has poor man gained thereby ? What rather has he

not lost—and what has not the world lost ? Take away this Great Light , the only light that penetrates " beyond the veil , " and what is there left for man ? Take from man the hope of a future life , and this world would be a dreary

existence indeed . What would the few fleeting years of disappointment , misery , suffering , and pain , mixed with a small portion of earthly happiness , doled out in sparing quantities , amount to ? Take away all hope of the future life , and

hope itself would be blotted out , and the world become a carnival of crime , and mankind one great , mad suicide . The Bible is the world ' s sheet anchor . On it the world ' s hopes are based . It is a book containing the best and

most holy precepts . It teaches of the life to come . It is the only source of food for a craving soul . It is a book of the most perfect laws , the most sublime poetry , and most ancient history . It meets the wants of our spiritual

natures , and to it let us cling , as the best we have in this world ; the only compass on the sea of life ; our only chart of the haven to which we are all hastening ; our moral and Masonic trestle board , Yes , better cling to it though we

know it to be of human origin ! Why will man insanely attempt to put out this great Light , in whose wake follow civilisation , refinement , education , morality , and our bright hopes of a

better life , when nothing is to be gained thereby , but everything to be lost ? There is a class of men whose unsatisfied natures are never at ease ; who deem it their province to be for ever pulling down instead of

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