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  • May 21, 1870
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  • Multum in Parbo, or Masonic Notes and Queries.
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The New Grand Officers.

teachings of Freemasonry . We must have Grand Officers who have set an example to the brethren in every respect ; whose devotion has been proved by

practical deeds , and not merely by lip-service . Let the rule be as our Right Worshipful Bro . Havers observed in Grand Lodge , to "Seek merit wherever it may be found , "

whether in the metropolis or the provincial districts , and when found let it be rewarded with those high dignities which are so justly appreciated by the Craft . We know that

great care is exercised in the selection of the Grand Officers of England , and we feel convinced that the Earl De Grey and Ripon has wisely and impartially exercised his right

of choice for the first time . That his lordship may rely upon the support of English Masons we are well assured , and we

conclude with the expression of a hope , that his reign may be long and prosperous , over a happy and united brotherhood .

Multum In Parbo, Or Masonic Notes And Queries.

Multum in Parbo , or Masonic Notes and Queries .

THK " RED CROSS" ORDER . In your paper of the 9 th of April I find that H . R . H . the Duke of Sussex is mentioned as Chief of the above degree . Having lately gone through our manuscripts and finding several

relating to different degrees referred to in your " Multum in Parvo " column , I enclose copy of a circular , which you may insert should you think proper . Jos . GREENWOOD , Todmorden . Gi-and Conclave of Emergency of the Royal Order oj II . R . D . M . K . D . S . II . Palestine , 1 st and 2 d Column of the Seven Darrecs Hi ., v ., vii ., ix ., l . x . x . xi .

NE PLUS LI . TRA . Sir Kt ., —You are respectfully requested to attend thc Duties of the Grand Conclave at the Free Masons' Tavern , on Thursday , the 6 th day of August , iSl 2 , at 4 o ' clock in the afternoon precisely , A . L . 5816 , A . n . 1812 , A . D . 694 , A . . 493 . _ _ .

For the Installation of His Royal Highness the Duke of Sussex as Grand Master of the Order , thc appointment of Grand Officers , and other general business ; upon which occasion your attendance is most earnestly requested at 4 o'clock in the afternoon precisely . ROHERT GILL , Grand Serine and Registr . No . 16 , Sun-street , Bishopsgate "Without .

" RECIPROCITY " AND " W . J . HUGHAN ( page 235 ) . Bro . IV . J . Hughan says 1 am a Scotch Mason , should it not be Scots Mason ? Perhaps Bro . " Leo " will reply to this . EDINBURGH .

A RECENT ACT OK PARLIAMENT . At page 199 of THE FREEMASON , the words ought to read " A recent Act of Parliament , " instead of " An old Act . " The question was asked by myself , if Masonic emblems are to be regarded as armorial bearings , and so liable to

taxation , under the recent Act , 32 and 33 Vic cap 14 ? It will be gratifying to the members of Masonic lodges throughout Great Britain to know that the Board of Excise has decided not so to regard them . To have pronounced Masonic emblems armorial bearings would have

been an unnatural straining of the terms of the Act , and would have been felt as a great hardship by Freemasons generally . I am glad , therefore , that the Board of Excise has taken what I may venture to call a' common-sense

view of the matter . It is evidently , also , a just view ; the Masonic emblems not being personal distinctions as armorial bearings , are but merely indicating connection with a lodge , and with the Masonic Fraternity . CI / ALMKK . S f . PATOX .

I 1 RO . " W . C * . D . AXD " DR . CHALMERS . " On my many visits to the Journeyman l , odge , Edinburgh , No . S , I made inquiries of the Right Worshipful Master the reason of a bust of I ) r .

Multum In Parbo, Or Masonic Notes And Queries.

Chalmers being placed in a niche of their lodge , and he replied " that it was in respect for him , and that in his young days he had often visited the lodge . " CHALMERS I . PATON . THE " RED CROSS , " BRO . " LUPUS , " AND BRO . MATIER , RE RRO . HUGHAN .

Bro . " Lupus knows my opinion ot his Masonic worth sufficiently well , I should hope , not to suppose for one moment I spoke of him when referring to the " petty opposition , " & c , that the " Red Cross " degree had received . I did not

even think of him when writing die observation . The matters under discussion appear to be generally in process of elucidation , and I am glad to find Bro . " Lupus " is quite my way of thinking , as also Bro . Matier with respect to the degree in

question . Xot having claimed anything but a Masonic origin . / fr / - any Masonic Chivalric degree , I do not see how my last letter on the subject under discussion can be considered as an amende honorable . Perhaps Bro . Matier will kindly

enlighten me as to what part of my previous communications he refers to when making such a statement . I claim for the " Red Cross " as legitimate a Masonic constitution as any other Masonic

Chivalric degree . Other brethren more conversant than myself with the history of the Order when purely chivalric , claim that the Masonic Red Cross is a direct descendant of the old Order , which was not Masonic . All that is

needful to secure our adhesion to this statement is to make known the proofs on which such a claim is made . It would be well for brethren interested in this discussion to refer to my previous letter , so as to see with me that I have nothing to reply to . W . J . HUGHAN .

P . S . —As much of Bro . " Lupus " letter refers to Bro . " R . VV . L ., " I can only say I have always found the latter brother very ready and willing to answer any of my numerous inquiries . Now is the time , however , to make known what exists with respect to this degree . W . J . H .

EARLV GERMAN ARCHITECTURE . " It was left for the Germans to carry this system to its acme of absurdity . Half the merit of the old round arched Gothic cathedrals on the Rhine consist in the solidity and the repose they display in every part . Their walls and

other essential constructions are always in themselves sufficient to support the roofs and vaults , and no constructive contrivance is seen anywhere * but when the Germans adopted the pointed Gothic style , their builders—they cannot be called architects—seemed to think that the

whole art consisted m supporting the widest possible vaults on the thinnest possible pillars , and in constructing the tallest windows with the most attenuated mullions . The consequence is , that , though their constructive skill still excites

the wonder of the Mason or engineer , the artist or the architect turns from the cold vaults and lean piers of their later cathedrals with a painful feeling of unsatisfied expectation , and wonders how such dimensions and such details should produce so utterly unsatisfactory a result . "

' * The Germans borrowed their pointed style from the French , at a period when it had attained its highest degree of perfection in the latter country . " Anent Strasburgh Cathedral— " What he ( Erwin von Steinbach ) really did , was to

commence the western facade , of which he laid the foundation in 1277 , and superintended the erection till his death , 41 years afterwards ( 1318 , or thereby ) , when he was succeeded by his sons , who carried it up to the platform in 1364 . There is no novelty or invention in his design , and only

those mistakes and errors which all Germans fellintowhenworkingin pointed Gothic . Thc spire that now crowns this front , rising lo a . height of 468 feet from the ground , was not finished till 1437 , and betrays all the faults of its age . The

octagonal pari is tall and weak in outline , the spire ungraceful in form , ancl covered with an unmeaning and constructively useless system of tracery . The long stone bars which protect and hide the windows ( of the facade ) are admirable

Multum In Parbo, Or Masonic Notes And Queries.

specimens of Masonry , but they are no more beautiful than those which protected our kitchen windows in Modern times . " Compare the foregoing able remarks of Mr . Ferguson with the mistakes unfortunately made by Bro . Tindell at page 17 of his , in . many

respects , very valuable " History of Freemasonry , " and ~ the similar remarks at page 85 of the " Freemason's Vade Mecum ; " also the following purely imaginary statement at page 54 of that work " The further improvement of the Gothic style , and the bringing of it to perfection ( I ) , was reserved nevertheless to the Germans . " This

and many other similar remarks show that the author is not quite so well posted up in the true history of Gothic architecture as he might be , neither does he seem to understand that architecture does not consist in a large collection of pretty and clever littlenesses , pasted together

without due consideration of their effect when put together as a whole ; but ofthe making up of one grand and uniform whole , wherein every subordinate part duly blends in with the mass to make up a uniform , consistent , and duly proportioned whole . This is what Strasburgh—the

glory and boast of Alsace—wants ; its high spire appears to me as a heterogeneous mass , the octagonal part suggesting the idea of having been stolen from off some other building , while the tapered part reminds me of a Chinese pagodaperhaps some poor bereaved Chinaman laments

its loss to this day ! The German skcinmctzen got to be very good stonecutters , but it seems to me they were very bad artists ; and although they were clever and handy masons , yet the rise and progress of Gothic architecture during the

twelfth and thirteenth centuries was about as much due to them as it was to me . And as for the great Masonic lodges of Germany which existed in the fifteenth century , how comes it that none of these were the mother of the

German Ireemasonry ofthe eighteenth and nineteenth centuries ? Were our Freemasonry derived from these old operative lodges , we would have expected Germany to have received its

speculative Masonry from its own operative lodges , whereas it did not ; but German Speculative Masonry , as well as all other Speculative Masonry anywhere practised , was adopted or copied from that of England after 1717 . W . P . B .

The Symbolism & Significance Of Numbers.

The SYMBOLISM & SIGNIFICANCE OF NUMBERS .

Bv BRO . WILLIAM CARPENTER , P . M ., P . Z . ( Continued pro in page 231 , ^ 8 ( eight ) is the beginning of a new week , and it indicates new life or resurrection . Noah ' s family of eight persons commenced a new life

after the Flood , and Christ rose from the dead on the eighth day . Eight also denotes the primitive law of nature , being the first cube , anil points out that all men are born equal . It is also esteemed the number most to be desired , new life .

9 ( nine ) , as a symbol , has been taken in verydiverse senses . As 3 ¦ * - 6 it is partly divine and partly evil ; as 4 -i- 5 it is incomplete worldliness ; as the square of 3 , it represents an intensity of individual completion . A striking peculiarity in

this number is , that it always reproduces itself by multiplication : thus 2 x 9 18 , i . e ., 1 and 8 ; 3 x 9 = 27 , i . e ., 2 and 7 ; 4 *•* 9 - 3 6 , i . e ., 3 and 6 ; 5 x 9 = 45 , i . e ., 4 and 5 , and so throughout . Hence , the Pythagoreans considered it a

symbol of matter , which though continually changing its form , is never annihilated . It was consecrated to the spheres , because the circumference of a sphere is 360 degrees , and 3 x 6 x 0 arc equal to 9 . It is also called the triple ternary .

As 111 Freemasonry , 9 derives its name from its being the product of 3 multiplied into itself , so in the higher degrees , 27 , which is 3 * 9 , and 81 , or 9 x 9 , are esteemed as sacred numbers .

10 ( ten ) is the first wholly complete number ; and it is the must sublime , as it * contains the monad , or Unity , which created all things , and o , thc symbol of the chaos , out of which the world was formed . It is also the foundation of

“The Freemason: 1870-05-21, Page 7” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 8 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fvl/issues/fvl_21051870/page/7/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
TABLE OF CONTENTS. Article 1
Reviews. Article 1
LINES Article 1
INSTALLATION of EARL DE GREY and RIPON as GRAND MASTER. Article 1
ROYAL MASONIC INSTITUTION FOR GIRLS. Article 4
Reports of Masonic Meetings. Article 5
Untitled Ad 6
Untitled Article 6
Untitled Article 6
Untitled Article 6
Untitled Article 6
THE NEW GRAND OFFICERS. Article 6
Multum in Parbo, or Masonic Notes and Queries. Article 7
The SYMBOLISM & SIGNIFICANCE OF NUMBERS. Article 7
Original Correspondence. Article 8
SCOTLAND. Article 9
INSTRUCTION. Article 9
Jottings from Masonic Journals. Article 9
ORDER OF THE TEMPLE & HOSPITAL. Article 10
SUPREME CHAPTER OF G. E. KTS. K.H. Article 10
METROPOLITAN MASONIC MEETINGS Article 11
Untitled Ad 11
Untitled Ad 11
Untitled Ad 11
Untitled Ad 11
Untitled Ad 11
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

The New Grand Officers.

teachings of Freemasonry . We must have Grand Officers who have set an example to the brethren in every respect ; whose devotion has been proved by

practical deeds , and not merely by lip-service . Let the rule be as our Right Worshipful Bro . Havers observed in Grand Lodge , to "Seek merit wherever it may be found , "

whether in the metropolis or the provincial districts , and when found let it be rewarded with those high dignities which are so justly appreciated by the Craft . We know that

great care is exercised in the selection of the Grand Officers of England , and we feel convinced that the Earl De Grey and Ripon has wisely and impartially exercised his right

of choice for the first time . That his lordship may rely upon the support of English Masons we are well assured , and we

conclude with the expression of a hope , that his reign may be long and prosperous , over a happy and united brotherhood .

Multum In Parbo, Or Masonic Notes And Queries.

Multum in Parbo , or Masonic Notes and Queries .

THK " RED CROSS" ORDER . In your paper of the 9 th of April I find that H . R . H . the Duke of Sussex is mentioned as Chief of the above degree . Having lately gone through our manuscripts and finding several

relating to different degrees referred to in your " Multum in Parvo " column , I enclose copy of a circular , which you may insert should you think proper . Jos . GREENWOOD , Todmorden . Gi-and Conclave of Emergency of the Royal Order oj II . R . D . M . K . D . S . II . Palestine , 1 st and 2 d Column of the Seven Darrecs Hi ., v ., vii ., ix ., l . x . x . xi .

NE PLUS LI . TRA . Sir Kt ., —You are respectfully requested to attend thc Duties of the Grand Conclave at the Free Masons' Tavern , on Thursday , the 6 th day of August , iSl 2 , at 4 o ' clock in the afternoon precisely , A . L . 5816 , A . n . 1812 , A . D . 694 , A . . 493 . _ _ .

For the Installation of His Royal Highness the Duke of Sussex as Grand Master of the Order , thc appointment of Grand Officers , and other general business ; upon which occasion your attendance is most earnestly requested at 4 o'clock in the afternoon precisely . ROHERT GILL , Grand Serine and Registr . No . 16 , Sun-street , Bishopsgate "Without .

" RECIPROCITY " AND " W . J . HUGHAN ( page 235 ) . Bro . IV . J . Hughan says 1 am a Scotch Mason , should it not be Scots Mason ? Perhaps Bro . " Leo " will reply to this . EDINBURGH .

A RECENT ACT OK PARLIAMENT . At page 199 of THE FREEMASON , the words ought to read " A recent Act of Parliament , " instead of " An old Act . " The question was asked by myself , if Masonic emblems are to be regarded as armorial bearings , and so liable to

taxation , under the recent Act , 32 and 33 Vic cap 14 ? It will be gratifying to the members of Masonic lodges throughout Great Britain to know that the Board of Excise has decided not so to regard them . To have pronounced Masonic emblems armorial bearings would have

been an unnatural straining of the terms of the Act , and would have been felt as a great hardship by Freemasons generally . I am glad , therefore , that the Board of Excise has taken what I may venture to call a' common-sense

view of the matter . It is evidently , also , a just view ; the Masonic emblems not being personal distinctions as armorial bearings , are but merely indicating connection with a lodge , and with the Masonic Fraternity . CI / ALMKK . S f . PATOX .

I 1 RO . " W . C * . D . AXD " DR . CHALMERS . " On my many visits to the Journeyman l , odge , Edinburgh , No . S , I made inquiries of the Right Worshipful Master the reason of a bust of I ) r .

Multum In Parbo, Or Masonic Notes And Queries.

Chalmers being placed in a niche of their lodge , and he replied " that it was in respect for him , and that in his young days he had often visited the lodge . " CHALMERS I . PATON . THE " RED CROSS , " BRO . " LUPUS , " AND BRO . MATIER , RE RRO . HUGHAN .

Bro . " Lupus knows my opinion ot his Masonic worth sufficiently well , I should hope , not to suppose for one moment I spoke of him when referring to the " petty opposition , " & c , that the " Red Cross " degree had received . I did not

even think of him when writing die observation . The matters under discussion appear to be generally in process of elucidation , and I am glad to find Bro . " Lupus " is quite my way of thinking , as also Bro . Matier with respect to the degree in

question . Xot having claimed anything but a Masonic origin . / fr / - any Masonic Chivalric degree , I do not see how my last letter on the subject under discussion can be considered as an amende honorable . Perhaps Bro . Matier will kindly

enlighten me as to what part of my previous communications he refers to when making such a statement . I claim for the " Red Cross " as legitimate a Masonic constitution as any other Masonic

Chivalric degree . Other brethren more conversant than myself with the history of the Order when purely chivalric , claim that the Masonic Red Cross is a direct descendant of the old Order , which was not Masonic . All that is

needful to secure our adhesion to this statement is to make known the proofs on which such a claim is made . It would be well for brethren interested in this discussion to refer to my previous letter , so as to see with me that I have nothing to reply to . W . J . HUGHAN .

P . S . —As much of Bro . " Lupus " letter refers to Bro . " R . VV . L ., " I can only say I have always found the latter brother very ready and willing to answer any of my numerous inquiries . Now is the time , however , to make known what exists with respect to this degree . W . J . H .

EARLV GERMAN ARCHITECTURE . " It was left for the Germans to carry this system to its acme of absurdity . Half the merit of the old round arched Gothic cathedrals on the Rhine consist in the solidity and the repose they display in every part . Their walls and

other essential constructions are always in themselves sufficient to support the roofs and vaults , and no constructive contrivance is seen anywhere * but when the Germans adopted the pointed Gothic style , their builders—they cannot be called architects—seemed to think that the

whole art consisted m supporting the widest possible vaults on the thinnest possible pillars , and in constructing the tallest windows with the most attenuated mullions . The consequence is , that , though their constructive skill still excites

the wonder of the Mason or engineer , the artist or the architect turns from the cold vaults and lean piers of their later cathedrals with a painful feeling of unsatisfied expectation , and wonders how such dimensions and such details should produce so utterly unsatisfactory a result . "

' * The Germans borrowed their pointed style from the French , at a period when it had attained its highest degree of perfection in the latter country . " Anent Strasburgh Cathedral— " What he ( Erwin von Steinbach ) really did , was to

commence the western facade , of which he laid the foundation in 1277 , and superintended the erection till his death , 41 years afterwards ( 1318 , or thereby ) , when he was succeeded by his sons , who carried it up to the platform in 1364 . There is no novelty or invention in his design , and only

those mistakes and errors which all Germans fellintowhenworkingin pointed Gothic . Thc spire that now crowns this front , rising lo a . height of 468 feet from the ground , was not finished till 1437 , and betrays all the faults of its age . The

octagonal pari is tall and weak in outline , the spire ungraceful in form , ancl covered with an unmeaning and constructively useless system of tracery . The long stone bars which protect and hide the windows ( of the facade ) are admirable

Multum In Parbo, Or Masonic Notes And Queries.

specimens of Masonry , but they are no more beautiful than those which protected our kitchen windows in Modern times . " Compare the foregoing able remarks of Mr . Ferguson with the mistakes unfortunately made by Bro . Tindell at page 17 of his , in . many

respects , very valuable " History of Freemasonry , " and ~ the similar remarks at page 85 of the " Freemason's Vade Mecum ; " also the following purely imaginary statement at page 54 of that work " The further improvement of the Gothic style , and the bringing of it to perfection ( I ) , was reserved nevertheless to the Germans . " This

and many other similar remarks show that the author is not quite so well posted up in the true history of Gothic architecture as he might be , neither does he seem to understand that architecture does not consist in a large collection of pretty and clever littlenesses , pasted together

without due consideration of their effect when put together as a whole ; but ofthe making up of one grand and uniform whole , wherein every subordinate part duly blends in with the mass to make up a uniform , consistent , and duly proportioned whole . This is what Strasburgh—the

glory and boast of Alsace—wants ; its high spire appears to me as a heterogeneous mass , the octagonal part suggesting the idea of having been stolen from off some other building , while the tapered part reminds me of a Chinese pagodaperhaps some poor bereaved Chinaman laments

its loss to this day ! The German skcinmctzen got to be very good stonecutters , but it seems to me they were very bad artists ; and although they were clever and handy masons , yet the rise and progress of Gothic architecture during the

twelfth and thirteenth centuries was about as much due to them as it was to me . And as for the great Masonic lodges of Germany which existed in the fifteenth century , how comes it that none of these were the mother of the

German Ireemasonry ofthe eighteenth and nineteenth centuries ? Were our Freemasonry derived from these old operative lodges , we would have expected Germany to have received its

speculative Masonry from its own operative lodges , whereas it did not ; but German Speculative Masonry , as well as all other Speculative Masonry anywhere practised , was adopted or copied from that of England after 1717 . W . P . B .

The Symbolism & Significance Of Numbers.

The SYMBOLISM & SIGNIFICANCE OF NUMBERS .

Bv BRO . WILLIAM CARPENTER , P . M ., P . Z . ( Continued pro in page 231 , ^ 8 ( eight ) is the beginning of a new week , and it indicates new life or resurrection . Noah ' s family of eight persons commenced a new life

after the Flood , and Christ rose from the dead on the eighth day . Eight also denotes the primitive law of nature , being the first cube , anil points out that all men are born equal . It is also esteemed the number most to be desired , new life .

9 ( nine ) , as a symbol , has been taken in verydiverse senses . As 3 ¦ * - 6 it is partly divine and partly evil ; as 4 -i- 5 it is incomplete worldliness ; as the square of 3 , it represents an intensity of individual completion . A striking peculiarity in

this number is , that it always reproduces itself by multiplication : thus 2 x 9 18 , i . e ., 1 and 8 ; 3 x 9 = 27 , i . e ., 2 and 7 ; 4 *•* 9 - 3 6 , i . e ., 3 and 6 ; 5 x 9 = 45 , i . e ., 4 and 5 , and so throughout . Hence , the Pythagoreans considered it a

symbol of matter , which though continually changing its form , is never annihilated . It was consecrated to the spheres , because the circumference of a sphere is 360 degrees , and 3 x 6 x 0 arc equal to 9 . It is also called the triple ternary .

As 111 Freemasonry , 9 derives its name from its being the product of 3 multiplied into itself , so in the higher degrees , 27 , which is 3 * 9 , and 81 , or 9 x 9 , are esteemed as sacred numbers .

10 ( ten ) is the first wholly complete number ; and it is the must sublime , as it * contains the monad , or Unity , which created all things , and o , thc symbol of the chaos , out of which the world was formed . It is also the foundation of

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